the forecaster, portland edition, april 10, 2013
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The Forecaster, Portland edition, April 10, 2013, a Sun Media Publication, pages 1-40TRANSCRIPT
April 10, 2013 News of The City of Portland Vol. 11, No. 15
www.theforecaster.net
INSIDE
Sports: Winter coaches of the yearPage 15
Homeless man dies in Portland campsite firePage 2
IndexObituaries ................... 13Opinion ........................ 8People & Business ..... 20Police Beat ................. 12
Real Estate ................. 39School Notebook ....... 14Sports ........................ 15
Arts Calendar ............. 22Classifieds .................. 33Community Calendar . 24Meetings .................... 24 Pages 26-30
Aquaponics startup outgrows Portland, heads to N. YarmouthBy Alex Lear
NORTH YARMOUTH — Fish waste is used by plants, which is converted by bacteria into nutrients for plants, which in turn filter clean and oxygen-ated water to be recirculated back to the fish.
It’s the circle of life.That’s the gist of aquaponics,
a symbiotic merging of aquacul-ture – through which fish and other aquatic animals are raised
in tanks – and hydroponics, the growing of plants in water.
And aquaponics is what Fluid Farms, a Portland-grown busi-ness that’s moving to North Yarmouth to grow produce and freshwater fish, is all about. Founders Jackson McLeod and Tyler Gaudet are building what they believe is Maine’s first commercial-scale aquaponic greenhouse on leased land at 1445 North Road.
The endeavor started in 2010 with the breeding of tilapia in the spare bedroom of Gaudet’s apartment.
“(We) obviously quickly out-grew that,” he said.
The longtime friends then operated Fluid Farms for two summer seasons in a small Bayside greenhouse in Portland. From there they sold herbs and
Jackson McLeod, left, and Tyler Gaudet, founders of Fluid Farms, are building what they believe is Maine’s first commercial-scale aquaponic greenhouse in North Yarmouth.
ALEX LEAR / THE FORECASTER
Baxter Academy reaches accord with ousted director
TROY R. BENNETT / BDN
John Jaques, founder of the Baxter Academy for Technology and Science charter school in Portland.
By Christopher CousinsBangor Daily News
AUGUSTA — A controversy-plagued Portland charter school that received pre-liminary approval Monday to open in the fall has reached an accord with its former executive director following his conten-tious ouster.
The board of directors of Baxter Acade-my for Technology and Science and John Jaques, its primary founder and former executive director, announced Tuesday that they have resolved all disputes be-tween them and have agreed to dismiss their respective legal claims, according to a statement from the academy.
“We have reached a settlement covering the outstanding issues,” Jaques said in the statement. “While the specific terms of the agreement are confidential, it settles all disputes between us, including the claim that I had mismanaged Baxter.”
Kelli Pryor, chairwoman of the Baxter board, wished Jaques well and com-mended him for his contributions to the formation of the school.
“It’s beneficial to have the issues settled in a way that we can all agree to,” Pryor said. “Now, we look forward to working with the Maine Charter School Commis-sion, our students and their families and local partners as we plan for the opening of Baxter Academy this fall.”
According to the press release, details of the settlement have been sealed and
Student-led campaign helps solidify support for charter school
By Amber CroninPORTLAND — After the Maine
Charter Schools Commission asked Baxter Academy for Technology and Science supporters to demonstrate support for the school, one enterprising student rose to the challenge.
Chris McCammon, now a freshman at Scarborough High School, brain-
stormed the idea for a fundraising cam-paign for the school. The project, called the 10 Day Campaign, sought to show the commission that there was support for the school by asking students and families make donations.
McCammon’s first step was to donate
See page 39
See page 31See page 31See page 31
Revised school budget cuts more jobsBy Amber Cronin
PORTLAND — The School Board Finance Committee last week cut another $1.5 million from the proposed fiscal year 2014 budget.
The reduction would elimi-nate more positions, add staff furlough days, hike employee health-insurance costs and fur-ther reduce spending for equip-ment and supplies.
Even with the new reductions, the district’s proposed budget is just over $98 million and will result in a more than 3.5 percent increase in the school portion of the property tax rate.
According to the district’s budget website, the budget will use $1.3 million from the district’s undesignated fund balance to cover $155,000 in capital costs, $500,000 for charter school expenditures and a portion of the unexpected shift in teacher retirement costs from the state to the district.
“This is a one-time use of the fund balance that we feel is ap-propriate and reasonable under the circumstances,” Superin-tendent of Schools Emmanuel Caulk said in a press release. “Looking ahead to next year,
April 10, 20132 Portland www.theforecaster.net
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Howard Bliss, hunger prevention superstarBy David Treadwell
BRUNSWICK — Claudia Adams, vice president of the Mid Coast Hunger Prevention Program, thinks Howard Bliss is “awesome.”
“This guy does everything,” Adams said.
Bliss began helping out at what was then called the Food Bank in 1997, when he hauled boxes of food from the Han-naford Bros. supermarket to St. Paul’s Episcopal Church. Today, at age 82, he’s still going strong.
And when Adams says he “does every-thing,” she’s not exaggerating.
Here’s just a partial list of Bliss’ nu-merous volunteer activities on behalf of an organization dedicated to providing food to citizens in need: Doing intake,
organizing food boxes for elders, keeping track of delivery records, making signs for upcoming events, picking up govern-ment food in Wiscasset, serving food to guests, establishing recycling guidelines and taking recycled items to a recycling center, making notices for upcoming Food Mobiles, and on and on.
Bliss also is a member of the board of directors of MHPP, and serves on the Volunteer Relations Committee and the Education Committee.
“Oh, golly. There are no words,” An-nette Muttell, the soup kitchen coordina-tor for MHPP, said of Bliss. “Howard is engaged in everything we do. He is unbelievable, just priceless.”
Bliss is also on the board at the Bath Area Food Banks, as a representative from his church. His duties there include organizing volunteers to staff the Food Pantry; doing intake; keeping records of client visits, and more.
He has not always been a superstar hunger prevention volunteer.
Bliss spent two years in the Army during the Korean War, graduated from Rochester Institute of Technology, and then spent the bulk of his career at Greenwich Country Day School in Connecticut, where he taught letterpress printing to students and oversaw most of the school’s printing requirements.
When you talk with Bliss about his im-mense contributions on behalf of hungry citizens in the Mid-Coast area, you learn that he gets as much as he gives.
“Every day is different,” he said, “and there’s no opportunity that I don’t look forward to. I really like getting to know the clients as human beings. They’re just
ROGER S. DUNCAN / FOR THE FORECASTER
Howard Bliss, right, greets clients in Brunswick last week at the Mid Coast Hunger Prevention Program, where he is also on the board. “I love it,” Bliss said. “There’s something different each day and I’m always on the go.”
Unsung HeroesOne in a series of profiles by Brunswick
writer David Treadwell about people who qui-etly contribute to the quality of life in greater
Portland. Do you know an Unsung Hero? Tell us: [email protected]
continued page 30
3April 10, 2013 Portlandwww.theforecaster.net
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Despite objections, council OKs social service grantsBy William Hall
PORTLAND — The City Council Monday approved allocating nearly $4 million in anticipated federal funds to more than a dozen community develop-ment, job creation and social services programs – but not before councilors expressed concerns about the allocation process.
In a 6-1 vote, the council adopted the recommendations of City Manager Mark Rees for distributing funds from the Department of Housing and Urban De-velopment, which are being requested for the 2014 fiscal year. Most of the money would come from HUD’s Community Development Block Grant program.
The meeting included a second public hearing on the plan, part of an annual process for distributing the HUD funds. The first hearing was held March 27.
The lone dissenting vote in Monday’s meeting was by Councilor Ed Suslovic, who said he was concerned about Rees’ “abandonment” of goals set by the the city’s CDBG Annual Allocation Com-mittee.
“I am troubled by the departure from the allocation committee’s recommenda-tions,” Suslovic said. “... This council has set priorities, which (the committee) upheld.”
The city manager is required to pro-pose a plan for distributing the HUD funds, based on – but not bound by – the committee’s evaluation of funding ap-plications. Rees previously explained his rationale for deviating from the commit-
tee recommendations.“I made some very difficult decisions
regarding social services,” he wrote in a memo. “With the growing needs of our homeless population, I feel it is impera-tive that we continue to fund our safety net programs, specifically food.”
Rees shaved 15.8 percent off other CDBG-funded applications to partially fund two food assistance programs that otherwise would not have qualified.
Councilor Kevin Donoghue asked for “insight” into the impact of Rees’ changes. One result is that an outreach program for homeless individuals will receive $11,200 less than it requested.
The city’s Homeless Outreach and Mobile Engagement Team had requested $75,000 in CDBG funds, but was given only $63,800 under Rees’ plan. The pro-gram, which is managed by the nonprofit Milestone Foundation, provides daily, on-the-street help for people needing shelter or struggling with substance abuse.
The funding reduction will “cripple” the the program, according to a letter from the foundation, which was read by a city staffer.
Donoghue called that “a difficult price to pay for reallocation.”
The impact of such cuts prompted Suslovic to introduce a motion to amend Rees’ proposal, restoring the allocation of HUD funds to the amounts recom-mended by the committee. The motion died when it did not receive a second.William Hall can be reached at 781-3661 ext. 106 or [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter: @
hallwilliam4.
Homeless man dies in Portland campsite fireBy William Hall
PORTLAND — A homeless man died in an accidental outdoor fire Saturday night – one of three major emergencies to which the Fire Department responded that day, City Hall spokeswoman Nicole Clegg said Sunday.
Investigators on Monday said Brian Barbour, 53, whose last known residence was on India Street, died after a candle ignited his tent near a stretch of Pan Am Railways tracks running along West Commercial Street.
The Office of the State Medical Ex-aminer determined Barbour died from smoke inhalation, according to Stephen McCausland, spokesman for the Maine Department of Public Safety.
Clegg said firefighters responded to a report of the fire just before midnight Sat-urday. As the blaze was being doused, the badly burned body of a man, eventually identified as Barbour, was discovered, along with the tent and personal belong-ings that had been destroyed. A small wooded area was also scorched.
Earlier on Saturday, at about 2:30 p.m., nearly half the Fire Department’s on-duty force was called to a fire in a remote area of Evergreen Cemetery, according to
Clegg. Twenty firefighters were needed to extinguish the blaze, which consumed several acres of woodland.
Shortly before 5 p.m. Saturday, seven fire companies and a Medcu unit re-sponded to an emergency call about smoke coming from the roof of a three-story apartment building at 29 Grant St., Clegg said.
Residents of the building were tem-porarily evacuated while firefighters ventilated the structure and secured a malfunctioning furnace, which was releasing dangerous levels of carbon monoxide gas.
Clegg did not report any injuries from either the Evergreen Cemetery or Grant Street episodes.William Hall can be reached at 781-3661 ext. 106 or [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter: @
hallwilliam4.
COURTESY PFD
#{newline}Portland firefighters extinguish a blaze in a remote wooded area of Evergreen Cemetery on Saturday afternoon, April 6.#{newline}
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Future of MaineCare fuels debate at USMBy William Hall
PORTLAND — As state lawmakers in Augusta debate whether Maine should broaden eligibility for MaineCare, the state’s Medicaid program, health-care policy experts came to Portland Monday to debate the same question.
About 50 people turned out at the Uni-versity of Southern Maine’s Wishcamper Center to hear a forum on the expansion of MaineCare. The panel of speakers as-sembled by the Muskie School of Public Service included Mary Mayhew, com-missioner of the state’s Department of Health and Human Services, and David Howes, president of Martins Point Health Care.
Medicaid, the joint federal-state pro-gram that funds health care for the poor and disabled, was expanded under the federal Affordable Care Act, also known as “Obamacare.” After a U.S. Supreme Court decision last summer, states were given the option of broadening eligibility standards for their Medicaid services – with the federal government picking up 100 percent of the cost for three years.
But Gov. Paul LePage has been am-
bivalent about the offer.As he tries deal with a projected $120
million revenue shortfall in MaineCare and another $484 million in payments owed to the state’s hospitals, LePage at first resisted any expansion of the pro-gram. The administration also claimed that most of the people who would become eligible for Medicaid under Obamacare were already covered by benefits MaineCare has added over the past decade.
Nevertheless, Mayhew opened the door last month to possible expansion of the program under Obamacare. Mayhew and the governor proposed a deal: Maine will participate in Medicaid expansion, if the federal government extends the length of its funding and gives the state greater flexibility in running MaineCare.
“We believe that if the federal govern-ment funds 100 percent of our Medicaid costs for expansion populations for 10 years, we can put our Medicaid program on a track to succeed in the long term,” Mayhew wrote in a March 18 letter to U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius.
“Maine’s last decade was marked by unsustainable growth in our Medicaid program,” she said, “and our taxpayers have shouldered the burden of early expansion.”
On Monday, Mayhew repeated the quid-pro-quo offer.
“Without a significant commitment from the federal government to support this expansion, I am concerned about the inability to support people with dis-abilities today with services they need and should be getting from the state,” Mayhew said. “We need a much greater level of support from the federal govern-ment, both to support ongoing costs to the program and to lead the transforma-tional efforts we know are necessary to improve the way the health care delivery system functions.”
Joseph Antos, a scholar at the Ameri-can Enterprise Institute in Washington, D.C., backed Mayhew’s offer, but urged caution.
“What Maine should do is not rush into anything. The governor’s letter is right on in wanting greater flexibility in managing a program that it has the legal responsi-bility to manage,” he said. “If the federal government is unwilling to release you from unnecessary oversight, there will be massive failure.”
Still, other panelists looked at the federally funded expansion as an oppor-tunity Maine cannot afford to miss.
“We need to do this,” said Sara Gagne-Holmes, executive director of Maine Equal Justice Partners, an advocacy group for low-income people. “There is no reason that childless adults (the primary population covered under the ex-pansion) have not been covered. They’re
some of the poorest people in the state, but we continue to say they don’t need coverage because should be able to afford health care themselves.
“Accepting these federal funds is an opportunity for Maine to provide some fairness.”
Howes, a physician, said the expansion will allow MaineCare to better manage health care for an uninsured population that otherwise seeks more expensive, less-efficient care in hospital emergency rooms.
“These people are out there being cared for in an uncoordinated, unman-aged system,” he said. “We obviously have to go for the best deal we can get, and as much autonomy as we can get in managing the program. ... But the care today is uncompensated, and we’re not managing it in a go-to way.”
Sara Rosenbaum, a professor at George Washington University School of Public Health, called the question of MaineCare expansion a “no-brainer.”
“Do we keep our residents covered?” she said. “Given the fact that this is a chance to create a continueous coverage system for almost everyone in Maine, the answer is of course we want the coverage.”
William Hall can be reached at 781-3661 ext. 106 or [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter: @
hallwilliam4.
5April 10, 2013 Portlandwww.theforecaster.net
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Portland travel agency still flying high after 20 yearsBy William Hall
PORTLAND — Travel agencies may seem like an endan-gered species, but don’t tell that to Pa-mela Hurley Moser.
Twenty years ago, there were more than 100 full-service, local agencies in Maine, said Hurley Moser, founder of Hurley Travel Experts. Records show most were in the Portland area.
Today, the Portland telephone directory lists fewer than a dozen. Only three are in the city.
With websites such as Expedia, Traveloc-ity, Hotwire, Priceline and Kayak offering travelers countless low-cost ways to book their own trips, the travel agency may seem destined to go the way of the dodo bird.
But Hurley, which specializes in group travel and meetings, corporate travel and luxury vacations, seems to be defying the odds.
The agency, headquartered at 415 Cum-berland Ave., has seen its sales grow from $24 million in 2011 to $40 million last year. This year, Hurley Moser is projecting sales
of $50 million.And after launching her one-person busi-
ness in 1993 at the age of 25, the Harpswell resident now employs a staff of 48, includ-ing a six-employee branch in Naples, Fla.
Instead of being threatened by the travel websites, Hurley Moser said her business welcomes them. Online travel booking frees agencies from being “order takers,” she said, and helps educate people about their travel choices and costs.
“Clients are coming to us now with more information,” she said Sunday. “They’re further along in the process.”
But there’s still a need for the inside knowledge and perspective that a travel agent brings, according to Hurley Moser. Her “experts” help by getting clients to focus on the overall goals of a trip.
“We ask them to paint a picture, we ask them what they really want,” she said. “Our job is then sometimes to introduce them to something they didn’t know existed.”
Travel agencies such as Hurley also help their clients by using experience and resources to get better travel deals, she said. For example, Hurley leverages the bargain-ing power of its membership in Virtuoso, an invitation-only association of 330 luxury travel agencies around the world.
Hurley can also arrange a luxury vacation
that will take you out of this world.The agency is one of only 120 inter-
nationally that can book passengers for commercial space flights through Virgin Galactic, the airline offshoot owned by mogul Richard Branson. Ticket prices for a suborbital spaceship trip start at $200,000.
Hurley Moser hasn’t sold any trips since becoming an “accredited space agent,” but said she’s more focused on serving her earthbound clients, some of whom have
been with her since the agency’s founding two decades ago.
In celebration of its 20th anniversary, Hurley is launching an online auction to benefit community nonprofit groups. The auction, called “20 for 20,” will put 20 trips and travel-related products up for bid, most with values of around $3,000. The auction starts May 1 and runs through the next year.William Hall can be reached at 781-3661 ext. 106 or [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter: @
hallwilliam4.
Harpswell resident Pamela Hurley Moser launched
her Portland travel agency in 1993.
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Man charged with murder to be returned to PortlandBy William Hall
PORTLAND — A New York man arrested there last week for the alleged murder of a woman in Portland has waived extradition and will make a court appearance Friday to arrange transport to Maine, according to a City Hall press release.
Anthony Pratt, 19, of the New York City borough of Queens, was taken into custody April 2. He allegedly killed 29-year-old Margarita Fisenko Scott, of Westbrook, with a single shot from a handgun, Police Chief Michael Sau-schuck said at a press conference April 3.
Pratt is being held in New York and is expected to be transported to Portland to face the murder charge after April 19.
Police believe Pratt killed Scott in the
first-floor apartment of a building at 266 West Concord St., where she occasionally stayed. Her body was found Jan. 17 in a 2002 Chevrolet SUV parked two miles away at Motel 6, 1 Riverside St.
The killing occurred sometime in No-vember 2012, according to police. Scott’s body was dumped in the SUV, which was then abandoned at the motel, although
Sauschuck would not say how long the SUV had been there. It is registered in the name of Scott’s husband, Cary Scott.
Scott, who was estranged from her husband, was dating Pratt at the time of her death. Saushchuck declined to speculate on a motive for the murder, but said “there’s the potential for domestic violence overtones as well as drug-related activity.”
The handgun used in the killing was stolen in a burglary in central Maine, and then sold in Portland, according to Sauschuck. He would not explain how Pratt allegedly came to have the weapon.
Sauschuck said Pratt was a subject of the homicide investigation from its begin-ning. He has a police record, although it is “nothing of significance,” the chief
said.Cary Scott was never a suspect and was
“incredibly cooperative” in the investiga-tion, Sauschuck added.
Portland police detectives worked closely with the New York Police Depart-ment in apprehending Pratt, and ques-tioned him in New York, the chief said.William Hall can be reached at 781-3661 ext. 106 or [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter: @
hallwilliam4.
PrattScott
Fire Department adds new ambulanceBy William Hall
PORTLAND — The Fire Department started up a new ambulance last week, a planned replacement for a vehicle that made nearly 13,000 emergency runs over the past four years as Medcu 6.
The new Medcu unit, a 2013 Braun Chief XL ambulance, is housed at Cen-tral Fire Station near City Hall. The unit provides emergency medical and transport services for the West End and downtown, and supplements emergency services off the peninsula.
The retired vehicle will be used as a reserve ambulance, filling in for Medcu units that are under repair or supplement-ing them during major emergencies.
The PFD currently has four Medcu units in active service, and replaces one each year.
“As the vehicle gets older, it becomes more expensive to maintain,” Fire Chief Jerome LaMoria said in a press release. “We use this replacement strategy as an efficient way to decrease maintenance
New options for drivers, new website for Casco Bay Lines
PORTLAND — Casco Bay Lines is preparing to give passengers with cars and light trucks some new ticketing op-tions this summer.
The ferry service has also launched a what is billed as a “new and improved” website that will eventually offer online ticketing for customers.
Starting June 15, CBL will offer reser-vations for transporting non-commercial cars and light trucks on three round trips to Peaks Island each Friday, Saturday and Sunday night. Reservation fees will be $25 each way, in addition to the ticket cost for the vehicle.
Currently, reservations are accepted only for commercial vehicles, which also are charged $25 each way. Non-commercial vehicles are now accepted only on a first-come-first-served basis.
In addition, an off-season ticket rate for non-commercial vehicles will be offered on Wednesdays during the summer. The special rate of $36.65 for a round trip to Peaks will replace the current sum-mer rate of $62.65 on Wednesdays. All vehicle tickets include ferry service for
continued page 30
continued page 31
7April 10, 2013 Portlandwww.theforecaster.net
David Brooks Stess, Javier and Family, circa 2002,gelatin silver print, 11 x 14 inches. Courtesy of VoxPhotographs.© David Brooks Stess
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Easter Seals hopes to grow programs for veterans, kidsBy Amber Cronin
PORTLAND — Services for military veterans and others are expanding under the Easter Seals Maine umbrella this spring.
A subsidiary of Easter Seals New Hampshire, the Maine organization, based at 125 Presumpscot St., is in the process of expanding its preschool program and developing a veterans as-sistance program.
Easter Seals Maine serves children and adults with aquatic and social therapies, speech and occupational therapy, a pre-school and soon the veterans program.
Gail Wilkerson, a Falmouth resident and executive director of Easter Seals Maine, said the organization is excited about the expansion of one of their larg-est programs, All Aboard Preschool.
“Our preschool program serves about 50 to 75 kids each year, and for the most part it is children with autism,” she said. “I am really passionate about that because my own son has autism. He is 17 now and really could have benefited from taking advantage of some of the same services offered here today. When I look at the kids who come through, I look back and see my own son in the faces of these kids.”
The preschool expansion includes 2,000 square feet of new space at the existing location. It will allow additions to the program, such as before- and
after-care and expanded early interven-tion, speech and language therapy, and occupational therapy services.
The expansion will also allow for typically developing children to come into the program, which will help model
behavior patterns for children who don’t always pick up on social queues.
“The idea is to help maximize learning and play,” Wilkerson said. “The expan-sion is very exciting because the rate of autism has increased to a rate of 1 in 50
kids and in Maine we have the second highest prevalence of autism in the na-tion. We believe our services are going to be needed more than ever and our expan-sion is happening just at the right time.”
Mallory Emmertz, whose 3-year-old son, Laneon Brainerd, has attended the school since he was 2, said that the All Aboard Preschool program has helped her son in ways that a traditional pre-school wouldn’t have.
Early in his life Brainerd was non-verbal and would not eat solid food, she said. But working with a speech and oc-cupational therapist for two hours a week has helped him tremendously.
“His communication is the biggest thing they have helped with,” Emmertz said. “(Before) he had not much com-munication whatsoever and now he com-municates in his own ways and with us and with other people.”
Emmertz said her son’s day-to-day routine at the preschool is spent in a classroom with three to five students who all have one-to-one teachers working with them. She said it is a very structured program, but the support they have had from the teachers has allowed her son to make great strides.
“Easter Seals is a very supportive and devoted program,” she said. “Overall, they have made a big difference in his life and I don’t know what we would do
AMBER CRONIN / THE FORECASTER
#{newline}Chairman Dennis Brown and Executive Director Gail Wilkerson are both fairly new to Easter Seals Maine, where there are big plans for expansion of the agency’s preschool and
veterans programs.#{newline}
News briefsStoreowner injured in robbery attempt
PORTLAND — A Rosemont neigh-borhood store owner was injured in an attempted robbery Monday morning, police said.
The owner of Don’s Baseball Card Center, 578 Brighton Ave., told police a man entered his store about 10:45 a.m. and threatened him. Believing he was being robbed, the store owner struggled with the man, who struck him on the head several times before fleeing. The suspect did not take any merchandise.
The storeowner received several lacera-tions, but they were not life-threatening, according to police.
The suspect is described as white, with brown hair, and in his 30s. He is approxi-mately 5 feet 10 inches tall and weighs between 150 and 180 pounds, according to police. He was wearing a light-colored shirt and jeans.
The suspect was seen fleeing inbound on Brighton Avenue in a gray, older-model Subaru Legacy station wagon that carried a roof rack and a Maine license plate with a partial registration number of 774 Y. The Subaru was driven by a white woman with dirty blond hair, tied in a ponytail.
Anyone with information regarding the incident was asked to contact police at 874-8533.
Registration open for Earth Day race
PORTLAND — The second Urban Runoff 5k will take place Saturday, April 20. The race celebrates Earth Day, which is April 22.
The race begins at 9 a.m. at Deering High School and winds through the sur-rounding neighborhoods and pieces of the Portland Trails system behind Ever-green Cemetery before popping back out
onto Stevens Avenue and ending back at the high school.
At the end of the race, runners and walkers will be greeted by The Green Neighbor Family Fest, which will pro-vide education about storm water pol-lution.
Online registration is available at www.urbanrunoff5k.com, but there will also be race-day registration from 7:30-8:45 a.m. at Deering High School.
Portland teacher a semifinalist for award
PORTLAND — A King Middle School teacher is one of the six semifinalists for Maine’s 2014 Teacher of the Year award.
Language arts teacher Karen MacDon-ald and the other semifinalists were hon-ored April 4 in a Statehouse event with Gov. Paul LePage and Maine Education Commissioner Stephen Bowen.
They will undergo a selection process consisting of school visits by a review panel, portfolio reviews and interviews. The winner will be announced at a surprise all-school assembly in early September.
MacDonald began working for Port-land Public Schools in 1978 and has held several positions within the district. She has been at King Middle School since 1989 and has helped the school change its focus to expeditionary learning.
continued page 30
April 10, 20138 Portland www.theforecaster.net
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Abby’sRoad
Abby Diaz
Trust is the fuel of family travelTraveling with young children is like living in a sus-
pended state of self-assessment. It is like being stuck in a question mark. It is like pressure-testing the line between drama and comedy.
Are we having fun right now, or are we being played for fools?
Last weekend, my hus-band and I took our almost-5-year-old daughter and our 18-month old son to the Camden-Rockport region for one night. My husband found a great rate at the Sa-moset Resort, and I jumped at the idea he nervously presented. He made the reservation. I packed cloth-ing, gear, and toiletries that would ensure my children’s comfort in the event of bliz-zard, heat wave, locusts, a measles outbreak, and/or famine.
My husband forgot his swimsuit, prescription medica-tion, and a change of socks.
We timed our departure so that it would coincide with our son’s nap time. We over-stimulated our daughter with promises that she could watch, for the very first time, a DVD on the car’s built-in screen. Our son fell asleep within 15 minutes, right around the time my husband realized that the DVD we brought suffered from a large, incapacitating
scratch through its center.Our car’s navigation system took itself rather seriously
by agreeing to remain functioning after we typed in our destination. The trip is essentially: take Interstate 295 north to Route 1. Then take Route 1 north. Congratulations, you will arrive at your destination.
The scenery along those two thoroughfares is reason enough to take the trip. You will never see a more confident and persistent concentration of (a) car dealerships; (b) gas stations; or (c) chiropractor offices. It appears everyone north of Brunswick has terrible posture from all the gas they manually deliver to their 13 automobiles.
Bird watchers might particularly enjoy the drive. Not be-cause I saw a lot of birds to recommend, but because I saw some of the largest American flags I have ever encountered. I can only imagine how impressive they’d be when viewed through binoculars.
If none of that sounds tempting, allow me to inform you that somewhere near the McDonald’s without the golden arches, you can visit an establishment that allows you to rent puzzles. Is this a monthly-membership enterprise, or are walk-ins welcome? What is the penalty for the inevi-table lost corner piece? These discoveries and more are all yours for the undertaking.
Upon arriving at the Samoset, my road warriors and I enjoyed not twisting our ankles on the resort’s rocky beach. We ventured into Camden, which is best described as a European village nestled into a seaside bay. We ate dinner at Cappy’s Chowder House, where my son confirmed to us that a decision to bring him into public spaces is a decision
taken at our own risk.By the time we left, my husband could only repeat “I
need to lie down.”As a family, we enjoy extreme sporting. For example,
we often test who can be quiet for the longest. True to this form, the kids and I spent the next morning in the hotel pool while my husband hid behind the Sunday paper. We then proceeded to the Camden Hills State Park. My hus-band had heard rave reviews about a gentle hike we could enjoy with our dead-weight offspring.
Twenty minutes later, I was bent over at a 90-degree angle, pushing my daughter up the face of a cliff in a Graco stroller as my husband gave himself early-onset herniated disk thanks to the son he had dangling in a backpack. With sweat streaming down our faces and swears forming at our lips, we both agreed we were having a wonderful time and that the hike was exactly as advertised.
At the summit, we debated which chiropractor to stop at during the return trip.
Our return home left us nostalgic for the 24 hours just survived. True, it was a vacation without any relaxation or selfish decision-making. Somehow, though, it still felt special, like the beginning of a tradition we would all look back on fondly.
But maybe that was just the PTSD talking. I don’t know. I still haven’t learned what parts of the family travel experi-ence I should trust.
Abby Diaz grew up in Falmouth and lives there again, because that’s how life works. She blogs at whatsleftover.com. Follow Abby on Twitter: @AbbyDiaz1.
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WoodfordsCongregational Church
202Woodford Street, Portland
NOTICE OF MEETINGPursuant to application by Nicholas Nadzo, Thomas Campbell,and Jeffrey Jordan, being three members of the WoodfordsCongregational Parish, an incorporated society in the City ofPortland, Maine, addressed to Allie Matthews in her capacity asNotary Public, the members of the Woodfords CongregationalParish above the age of 18 years are DIRECTED to assemblein a
PARISH MEETING onTuesday, April 23, 2013 at 6:30 PM
1.Election of Clerk (Jeffrey Jordan is the Church Clerk).2.Election of Moderator (Nicholas Nadzo is the Church Moderator).3.Approval and ratification of Lease Agreement and
authorization to the Moderator to execute the LeaseAgreement on behalf of the Parish.
4.To act on the following resolution (to authorize formally thetransfer of the church property):
To authorize the conveyance of real and personal propertyowned by the Parish, including real estate located at186-218 Woodford Street in the City of Portland,Cumberland County, Maine, described in the followingdeeds: Book 1047 at Page 215, Book 1056 at Page 357,Book 2142 at Page 37, and Book 2232 at Page 12, all asrecorded in the Cumberland County Registry of Deeds, forOne Dollar ($1.00); and authorizing Nicholas Nadzo andJeffrey Jordan, or either of them acting singly, to executeon behalf of the Parish a deed, and bill of sale, and suchother documents as may be needed to complete thetransfer of title.
5. To authorize dissolution of the Parish following completion ofthe transfer of real and personal property.6. To consider such other matters as may properly come beforethis Special Meeting.
LePage budget fails communities, studentsBy Sen. Anne Haskell and Rep. Matthew Moonen
It is time to stand up for our values. As Mainers, we highly value education, responsibility and fairness. Along with many others, we believe that our state budget needs to reflect these shared values. Our budget should support working families and create pathways to success for future generations.
The greatest investment we can make for our future is to provide the best learning expe-rience for students. We need to make sure that Maine’s schools and classrooms provide the best learning environment for our young people to reach their full potential. The way to do this is to support our teachers and provide our schools with the tools neces-sary for a first class education – and the money needed to acquire these tools.
This is why supporting public school systems is a priority for the Democrats in the Maine Legislature. We understand that putting students first means strength-ening classrooms, not underfunding and undermining them. We know that we should be looking at what we can improve and what we can do to encourage student achievement. We also recognize that investing in educa-tion not only is important in preparing young people for the real world, but it is the best economic stimulator and
job creation program that we have.
However, schools in Maine face a serious threat from the governor’s proposed budget. While Gov. Paul LePage claims that schools would be flat funded over the next biennium, the truth is as a result of proposed changes and budget slight-of-hand gimmicks, his budget
will essentially cut $40 million for funding public schools over the next two years. This is something our future cannot afford.
The biggest problem with the governor’s proposed budget is that he wants to shift new costs from the state to local school districts. These
are costs the state has covered, but the governor’s budget would suddenly thrust them upon local school districts. That would make communities responsible for millions of dollars of additional costs.
Portland will receive more than $1.1 million less in education funding for fiscal year 2013-2014 than it did for the previous fiscal year. Over the next two years, the city will have to make up for more than $2.5 million in funding it won’t receive. This is the governor’s way of pushing off responsibility by shifting the burden on our communities.
Whether the city of Portland chooses to raise prop-
erty tax or cut school programs, public safety or public works, the governor’s proposed budget puts our commu-nity in a very bad situation. By raising property taxes, middle-class families are unfairly burdened. By cutting school programs, our young people are not receiving the best education they can receive. Our future leaders need to be given the best opportunity to succeed and reach their full potential.
The governor’s approach to budgeting lacks what Maine needs to improve our economy. His one-size-fits-all method undermines communities and shortchanges our students. We need to look forward by supporting our students and teachers. By underfunding our classrooms, we are doing a disservice to the future.
What Maine needs is a responsible budget that en-sures we spend our limited resources in the best way possible and that all Mainers pay their fair share. The wealthiest should be doing their part to give others the chance to succeed and lawmakers should stand up for smart solutions that are right for Maine people and are fair for all.
Democratic state Sen. Anne Haskell is serving her first term in the Maine Senate and represents District 9 in Portland and part of Westbrook. Rep. Matthew Moonen, also a Democrat, is serving his first term in the Maine House of Representatives and represents District 118 in Portland.
April 10, 201310 Portland www.theforecaster.net
PolicyWonk
Orlando Delogu
Contrary to right-wing opinion, the world is not flatThe refusal to accept hard facts, truths that stare us in
the face, has become the hallmark of the political right in the nation, and in Maine.
The insistence by right-of-center political leaders (Gov. Paul LePage is one among many) on policies that ignore facts and truth is stifling the U.S. and Maine economies.
Which policies? What untruths have we suc-cumbed to? Here are some examples:
• “Cutting taxes for wealthy individuals and corporations will stimulate the economy and create jobs.”
Not true. The federal tax rate on individuals making more than $400,000 was recently increased, but fed-eral income tax burdens re-main at a 60-year low. The massive (2001-2003) Bush tax cuts did not ward off the 2007-2009 recession; they did not bring us out of the recession. These cuts simply increased the nation’s debt.
Although the U.S. corporate tax rate (35 percent) seems high, the effective rate (by virtue of exemptions, loopholes, and tax credits) is less than half that. We rank 21st out of 25 industrial nations in corporate tax burden. This low effective rate did not prevent the recession – it has not facilitated a rapid recovery from recession. This low rate also raised the national debt.
In Maine, the LePage tax cuts – roughly $150 million dollars annually, largely benefiting the wealthy – have not turned the economy around. Maine’s job growth is non-existent; unemployment has not gone down; the quality of life is declining. The only effect these
cuts have had is to produce revenue gaps that make it increasingly difficult to adequately fund schools, road maintenance, other infrastructure needs, and the needs of the poor, the elderly, and the handicapped.
These are the facts. They speak loudly. At national and state levels of government, tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations do not create jobs; they do not turn an economy around.
• “Austerity budgets and debt reduction will stimulate the economy and create jobs.”
Not true. The lessons of Europe – England, Ireland, Spain, Portugal, Greece, Italy – shout out to us. For years, all of these nations have been drinking the Kool-Aid of austerity budgeting. All of them are mired in recession or double-dip recession. Unemployment in these countries has been prolonged, and higher than in the U.S. (in many cases much higher).
In the U.S., austerity budgeting in the form of the “sequester” will reduce the nation’s debt slightly. But all economists agree it will slow down the rate of economic recovery. People will remain unemployed, and for lon-ger periods. We failed to distinguish between long-term debt reduction that must eventually be fashioned, and short-term debt that must grow to provide the needed stimulus to get out of recession.
In Maine, LePage’s austerity budgeting began by sharply reducing state employee and teacher retirement benefits; it moved to tightening eligibility for a wide range of welfare benefits; it is now focused on cutting off municipal revenue sharing, flat funding education, and allowing almost all of the state’s regulatory pro-grams and infrastructure to deteriorate over time. He would allow municipalities to fund (where the state leaves off) what they choose to fund – but he knows that few municipalities have the resources to do so.
Again, these are the facts. Austerity budgets do not re-vive an economy; they do not produce jobs. Indeed, the evidence is to the contrary: in Europe, the U.S. and in
Maine, austerity budgets prolong economic downturns and high unemployment.
• “Avoiding debt (bonding) during recessionary peri-ods is good economic policy.”
Not true. Contrary to the view of most economists, the governor (without any supporting evidence) has taken the position that bonding is inappropriate during tight fiscal times. It makes no sense.
The facts are that interest rates are low; that Maine is not overburdened with debt; that countless projects throughout the state are ready to go; that construction firms hit hard by the housing downturn, need and want the work; that bid prices on the few projects that have moved forward were well under engineering estimates. In spite of these facts, the governor blocked a bond package during his first two years in office and has frozen $100 million in approved bonds.
In sum, bonding to build needed infrastructure over the last several years would have been anti-recessionary: It would have reduced unemployment, and enabled us to acquire this infrastructure at write-down prices. We’ve lost these opportunities because of LePage’s “no-bonding” policy – a policy contrary to common sense and good economics.
The governor and the political right cannot continue to advance policies built on asserted facts that are untrue, essentially asserting the world is flat. In each of the examples I’ve cited, there is overwhelming evidence that the assertions made (and constantly repeated) are incorrect.
Maine is paying a heavy price for this obdurateness. It needs to end.
Orlando Delogu of Portland is emeritus professor of law at the University of Maine School of Law and a longtime public policy consultant to federal, state, and local government agencies and officials. He can be reached at [email protected].
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Despite Beem’s belief, we thrive on competition
I often wonder if resident guru, now prophet, Edgar Allen Beem rereads his pieces, wishing he could hit “delete.”
Please read his last, egotistically dubbed “Universal Notebook.” It’s deletion worthy. Beem prophesied the end of our human world this century. Why? Competition. The competition which has reduced prices (when logically adjusted for currency inflation) of everything from Apple computers to those $4 prescriptions.
Or, think Hubble photos and a competitive space race with the (defunct) Socialist USSR. Yes, originally competitive – not cooperative.
He actually said, “If the 21st century is not to be the last century in human history, cooperation must replace
competition as our local, national and global modus operandi.” The title of this anti-capitalism rant: “Cooperate or perish.” How typical of his ilk to be dispiriting and demeaning. How apprecia-tive is his liberal congregation,
however. (Pardon my assumption that defenders of Beem’s “universal” knowledge are usually hand-wringing, appre-
hensive, progressive, well-meaning liberals. They just are, unabashedly.)
Competition, Beem claims, is useful for sporting events, game shows and amusements – fun, but meaningless. He adds, “the entire global economy is far too important to be left to competitive gamesmanship.” He must agonize that socialist economic experiments of “cooperation for the common good” just keep failing. Their misguided leaders ultimately succumb to human nature. Meanwhile, capital-istic competition, Schumpeter’s “creative destruction,” and fearlessly entrepreneurial humans will continue to raise standards of living – universally, including, thanklessly, his.
Bill GardinerYarmouth
11April 10, 2013 Portlandwww.theforecaster.net
Drop us a lineThe Forecaster welcomes letters to the editor as a part of the dialogue so important to a community newspaper. Letters should be no longer than 250 words; longer letters may be edited for length. Letters to the editor will also always be edited for grammar and is-sues of clarity, and must include the writer’s name, full address and daytime and evening telephone numbers. If a submitted letter requires editing to the extent that, in the opinion of the editor, it no longer reflects the views or style of the writer, the letter will be returned to the writer for revision, or rejected for publication. Deadline for letters is noon Monday, and we will not publish anonymous letters or letters from the same writer more than once every four weeks. Letters are published at the discretion of the editor and as space allows.
E-mail letters to [email protected].
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We are not responsible for photos, which will only be returned if you enclose a self-addressed envelope.
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The Forecaster is a division of the Sun Media Group.
The Forecaster is a weekly newspaper covering community news of Greater Portland in four editions: Portland Edition; Northern Edition covering Falmouth, Cumberland,
Yarmouth, North Yarmouth, Chebeague Island and Freeport; Southern Edition covering news of South Portland, Scarborough, and Cape Elizabeth; Mid-Coast Edition covering
the news of Brunswick, Topsham, Bath and Harpswell
President - David CostelloPublisher - Karen Rajotte WoodEditor - Mo MehlsakSports Editor - Michael HofferStaff Reporters - Amber Cronin, Will Graff, Will Hall, David Harry, Alex Lear, Dylan MartinNews Assistant - Noah Hurowitz Contributing Photographers - Paul Cunningham, Roger S. Duncan, Diane Hudson, Keith Spiro, Jason VeilleuxContributing Writers - Scott Andrews, Edgar Allen Beem, Orlando Delogu, Abby Diaz, Halsey Frank, Mike Langworthy, Perry B. Newman, David TreadwellClassifieds, Customer Service - Catherine GoodenowAdvertising - Janet H. Allen, John Bamford, Charles GardnerProduction Manager - Suzanne PiecuchDistribution/Circulation Manager - Bill McCarthy
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The UniversalNotebook
Edgar Allen Beem
Be it ever so humble …My grandmother lived in the same house in Portland for 47 years. I have now lived in the same house in Yarmouth for 31, far longer than I have ever lived anywhere in my life. I’ve been thinking about all the houses I’ve lived in – about 20 by my count – as Carolyn and I start thinking about what comes next, now that the girls are grown and out of the house.
Strange to think of all those houses, rooms, yards that were once so familiar, that were once “home,” now dim recollections long since inhabited by others.
The Hollanders have lived in my grand-mother’s old house for decades now, but I still think of it – buttermilk yellow in memory, lilac in fact – as Nana’s house. My friend Tanya tells me the old slate-bed pool table with the leather pockets is still down there in the basement where I played on it the 1950s and 1960s. I forgot to ask whether the antique black slate sink is still in the kitchen. I hope so.
The fact that my family moved a great deal when I was growing up is probably the reason I haven’t moved much since. I lived in more than a dozen homes before I graduated from college. My daughters lived in one, two in the case of our oldest. Because my father was in the Navy and then got transferred a lot by Met Life, I lived in Brunswick, Waterville, Fal-mouth, San Diego, Mechanic Falls, Lewiston, Auburn, Groton, Mass., and Pawtucket, R.I., before we more or less settled down in Westbrook in 1960.
In 1966, unhappy as a salesman, my father went back to sea in the merchant marine and my mother took up real estate to pass the time. She quickly became one of her own best customers, such that my father used to joke that he was never sure where “home” was when he came home. My parents owned five different homes in Westbrook at one time or another with a few rentals interspersed.
My father, having graduated from Maine Maritime Academy and served aboard liberty ships in World War II, was in his final year at Bowdoin College when
I was born in 1949, so my first home was an apart-ment in the building that is now the Elks Lodge on the Brunswick town green. Daughter Tess will be graduat-ing from Bowdoin herself next month. It is the fact that the last of our three girls will be out of college (so we theoretically may have a little more money) that has us thinking about whether to move somewhere, and if so where.
When I suggest winterizing the camp up on Thomp-son Lake in Otisfield, Carolyn just rolls her eyes. Not only would she have to commute more than an hour each way to work in Freeport, but she probably can’t imagine living up at the lake with me. Then again, maybe she can.
So how about trading our little cape in Yarmouth for a big old Georgian townhouse in Richmond? You can get a lot more bang for your housing buck if you move out of the preferred suburbs. Or maybe we should move back into Portland. We lived in the Park Street row-houses when we first got married and loved it. We were both born in Portland and Carolyn grew up there. She’s the only Portland High graduate I’ve ever met. So moving back into Portland (Buy? Rent? Single-family? Apartment building? Condo?) would be like going home again.
But of course, you can’t go home again. And, anyway, I’m not sure we can afford Portland. The row house we lived in sold for $100,000 in the 1980s. I’m sure it would fetch more than a million today.
We have three little grandchildren now and another on the way, so maybe we should move out into the country, buy a big old farm with room for the little ones to run around in the fields and play in the barn. Plant a big garden. Maybe raise a few chickens and ducks. Get a goat.
On second thought, probably not.Carolyn, who is fun-loving, adventurous and gener-
ally up for anything, would move in a heartbeat, but I’m afraid I’m kind of an old stick in the mud. So chances are we’ll just stick it out here in the mud, maybe make a few long-overdue improvements to the old place.
With 31 years’ worth of cultch and accumulation, this little house somehow seems smaller now than it did when there were five of us living here. Yes, that’s it – we’ll just stay right here where we belong.
Freelance journalist Edgar Allen Beem lives in Yarmouth. The Universal Notebook is his personal, weekly look at the world around him.
Tax increases stifle U.S. energy companies
The president is talking about reducing the federal deficit without crippling the budget – great promises on an extremely important issue.
However, instead of talking about spending cuts, he’s attacking the oil and gas industry and planning to raise taxes on energy companies.
The so called “stimulus” bill that is being circulated by President Obama includes provisions that would skew the global playing field against U.S.-based oil and natu-ral gas companies. He wants to do this by changing exist-
ing “dual capacity” r u l e s , the t ax laws that grant tax credits to
American companies generating income in foreign countries that enables them to use taxes they’ve already paid abroad to offset additional domestic taxation on that same foreign income.
By eliminating dual capacity, Obama’s measure would double-tax our domestic oil and natural gas producers, putting them at a competitive disadvantage with foreign operators. This is unacceptable to me. As a Mainer, I firmly believe that President Obama and Congress should work to maintain our domestic industries’ com-petitive edge.
The federal deficit should be tackled with reduced spending and an increase in job production, not punitive tax increases on proven job creators.
Jon StinsonPortland
Beem trips over the competitive edge
I was flabbergasted by Edgar Allan Beem’s latest fan-tasy regarding the ineffectiveness of competition (“Co-operate or perish,” April 1, 2013). Since he’s probably still using a rotary dial phone, perhaps he missed the fact that thanks to intense competition most of us now carry telephones in our pockets that have more computing power than desktops did a few years ago. Or perhaps the fact that in response to rising gasoline prices, car makers are falling all over themselves selling more ef-ficient cars that customers demand. Southwest Airlines didn’t achieve success because it got its employees to cooperate – it created an entirely new flying experience that lured customers from competing airlines. I could go on, but why bother? Beem has become so detached from reality I suggest it’s time The Forecaster beam him to a more suitable planet.
David MurrayFalmouth
April 10, 201312 Portland www.theforecaster.net
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PORTLANDArrests
3/30 at 7 p.m. Suzanne G. Ryder, 48, of Al-fred, was arrested on Fore Street by Officer Dan Aguilera on a charge of operating under the influence.3/30 at 9 p.m. Kayla McInnis-Warren, 30, of Biddeford, was arrested on Wilmot Street by Officer Heather Brown on an outstanding
warrant from another agency and a charge of theft by unauthorized taking or transfer.3/30 at 11 p.m. Paul Hunter, 25, no address listed, was arrested on Cedar Street by Of-ficer Zachary Finley on a charge of disorderly conduct.3/30 at 11 p.m. Christopher Knight, 21, of Rockland, was arrested on Dana Street by Officer Eric Johnson on a charge of disor-derly conduct.3/31 at midnight. Douglas N. Hersom, 32, of Lewiston, was arrested on Mayfield Street by Officer Kevin Murphy on a charge of operating after license revocation for being a habitual offender.3/31 at midnight. Nickoles Morales, 25, of Scarborough, was arrested on Fore Street by Officer Vincent Rozzi on a charge of disor-derly conduct.3/31 at noon. Gerald M. Finks, 74, of Port-land, was arrested on Congress Street by
Officer Sara Clukey on a charge of operating after suspension.3/31 at 2 p.m. Philip J. Bartley, 36, no address listed, was arrested on Forest Avenue by Of-ficer Matthew Rider on a charge of violation of conditional release.3/31 at 8 p.m. Raeann M. Doyon, 37, of Portland, was arrested on Riverside Street by Officer Matthew Pavlis on an outstanding warrant from another agency and a charge of negotiating a worthless instrument.4/1 at 1 a.m. Robert Grady, 51, of Standish, was arrested on Congress Street by Officer Charles Hodgdon on charges of misuse of identification and theft by unauthorized tak-ing or transfer.4/1 at 4 p.m. James A. Logan, 49, no address listed, was arrested on Pearl Street by Officer Eric Johnson on a charge of criminal trespass.4/1 at 4 p.m. Jerry L. Monahan, 43, of Port-land, was arrested on Washington Avenue by Officer David Schertz on a charge of violation of conditional release.4/1 at 8 p.m. Marissa R. Corliss, 20, of Portland, was arrested on East Oxford Street by Officer Dan Aguilera on an outstanding warrant from another agency and a charge of tampering with a witness.4/1 at 8 p.m. Renan J. Vasquez, of East Hart-ford, Conn., was arrested on Riverside Street by Officer Matthew Pavlis on an outstanding warrant from another agency.4/1 at 10 p.m. Benjamin T. Anthony, 24, of Portland, was arrested on St. Lawrence Street by Officer Jonathan Reeder on charges of violation of conditional release and disor-derly conduct.4/2 at midnight. Vladimir Opacek, 20, of Westbrook, was arrested on Mason Street by Officer Jacob Titcomb on a charge of robbery.4/2 at midnight. Joshua Richardson, 30, of Portland, was arrested on High Street by Officer Joshua McDonald on an outstanding warrant from another agency and a charge of operating after suspension.4/2 at 3 a.m. Samuel G.P. Ogak, 27, of Portland, was arrested on Brighton Avenue by Officer David Hemond on a charge of violation of conditional release.4/2 at 11 a.m. Vincent Lombardi, 40, of Standish, was arrested on Saco Road by Of-ficer Kelly Gorham on a charge of theft by unauthorized taking or transfer.4/2 at 1 p.m. Kimberly J. Lang, 47, of South Portland, was arrested on Congress Street by Officer Robert Pelletier on an outstanding warrant from another agency and a charge of allowing a dog to run at large.4/2 at 3 p.m. Nathaniel Gilbert, 20, of Port-land, was arrested on Deane Street by Officer Alissa Poisson on a charge of assault.4/2 at 6 p.m. Jennifer L. Wilson, 36, of Portland, was arrested on Congress Street by Officer David Cote on a charge of criminal trespass.4/2 at 7 p.m. Benjamin Chiasson, 25, of Portland, was arrested on Forest Avenue by Officer Matthew Pavlis on a charge of operat-ing after suspension.4/2 at 9 p.m. Jose Guerra, 53, no address listed, was arrested on Marginal Way by Officer Michael Galietta on a charge of disorderly conduct.4/2 at 11 p.m. James Clifford, 46, no ad-dress listed, was arrested on Pine Street by officer Jeffrey Viola on a charge of theft by unauthorized taking or transfer.4/3 at midnight. Shawn T. Currier, 35, no address listed, was arrested on Congress Street by Officer Laurence Smith on a charge of criminal threatening.4/3 at 9 a.m. Louis B. McAfee, 24, no address listed, was arrested on Preble Street by Officer Daniel Knight on a charge of public drinking.4/3 at 10 a.m. Jonathan M. Morin, 38, no address listed, was arrested on St. John Street by Officer David Argitis on an outstanding
warrant from another agency and a charge of operating after suspension.4/3 at 11 a.m. Kabir H. Geiger, 34, of Portland, was arrested in Monument Square by Officer Daniel Rose on a charge of criminal trespass.4/4 at 4 p.m. William S. Hurt, 29, of Portland, was arrested on Anderson Street by Officer Laurence Smith on charges of criminal tres-pass and obstructing public ways.4/4 at 8 p.m. Linda J. Annis, 26, of Portland, was arrested in Monument Square by Officer David Cote on a charge of aggravated assault.4/4 at 9 p.m. Michael G. Anderson, 31, of Portland, was arrested on Brighton Avenue by Officer Eric McCusker on a charge of operating under the influence.4/5 at 5 a.m. Cheryl Emery, 45, of Portland, was arrested on Valley Street by Officer Jonathan Roberts on a charge of disorderly conduct.4/5 at 8 a.m. Nialanis P. Liriano, 26, of Portland, was arrested on Oxford Street by Officer Daniel Knight on a charge of being a fugitive from justice.4/5 at 9 a.m. Lavina Garcia, 37, of Portland, was arrested on Riverside Street by Officer John Cunniff on an outstanding warrant from another agency and a charge of assault.4/5 at 9 a.m. Alicia M. Lutz, 22, of Portland, was arrested on Wharf Street by Officer Mat-thew Rider on a charge of assault.4/5 at 3 p.m. Shane A. Randall, 24, of Gorham, was arrested on Riverside Street by Officer Nicholas Goodman on a charge of carrying a concealed weapon.4/5 at 5 p.m. Mark Moreau, 43, of Portland, was arrested on Marginal Way by Officer Thien Duong on a charge of public drinking.4/5 at 7 p.m. Michael A.E. Wiggin, 28, of Portland, was arrested on Congress Street by Officer Gayle Petty on a charge of violation of conditional release.4/5 at 8 p.m. Domonique Covington, 25, of Portland, was arrested on St. John Street by Officer Henry Johnson on charges of operat-ing under the influence and leaving the scene of an accident.4/6 at 2 a.m. Anthony W. Andrews, 30, of Portland, was arrested on Sherman Street by Office Paul King on charges of assault and refusing to submit to arrest or detention.4/6 at 4 a.m. Peter E. Purington, 38, of Gardiner, was arrested on Forest Avenue by Officer Timothy Farris on an outstanding warrant from another agency and a charge of burglary of a vehicle.4/6 at 3 p.m. Francis McNeice, 45, of Portland, was arrested on Congress Street by Officer Nicholas Goodman on a charge of unlawful possession of scheduled drugs.4/6 at 5 p.m. Mohamed O. Hassan, 36, no address listed, was arrested on Portland Street by Officer Brent Abbott on a charge of assault.4/6 at 7 p.m. Michael Bisson, 37, no address listed, was arrested on Fore Street by Officer Eric Johnson on an outstanding warrant from another agency and a charge of disorderly conduct.4/6 at 8 p.m. Robert McCullough, 27, of Portland, was arrested on Seeley Avenue by Officer Evan Bomba on an outstanding warrant from another agency and a charge of criminal trespass.4/6 at 8 p.m. Adam J. Ridlon, 31, no address listed, was arrested on Fore Street by Of-ficer Brent Abbott on a charge of disorderly conduct.4/6 at 11 p.m. Colin P. Cunningham, 24, of Gray, was arrested on Congress Street by Of-ficer Charles Frazier on a charge of operating under the influence.4/7 at 2 a.m. Rose M. Gilliam, 29, no ad-dress listed, was arrested on Middle Street by Officer David Hemond on an outstanding warrant from another agency and a charge of unlawful possession of scheduled drugs.
13April 10, 2013 Portlandwww.theforecaster.net
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Obituaries policyObituaries are news stories, compiled, written and edited by The Forecaster staff. There is no charge for publication, but obituary information must be provided or confirmed by a funeral home or mortuary. Our preferred method for receiving obituary information is by email to [email protected], although faxes to 781-2060 are also acceptable. The deadline for obituaries is noon Monday the week of publication.
ObituariesWilma Bozak Baldwin, 86: An artistic soul who loved life
PORTLAND — Wilma Bozak Bald-win, 86, of Portland, died March 29.
She was born Sept. 19, 1926, in Ra-ven Run, Pa., the daughter of Michael and Anna Bozak. She grew up in Shenando-ah, Pa. and graduated from the Philadelphia School of Art. She worked in and loved fashion and design. Her journey led her to marry John Baldwin in 1952 and they began life together in the Washington, D.C., area, where they raised their family.
In 1994, they moved to Portland. Embracing the beauty of New England, Baldwin spent her time painting water-colors, cooking, sewing, reading, and en-joying her beloved husband, the beauty of her children, grandchildren, and friends. Her house never was less than a home.
Baldwin loved life. Her life’s canvas showed how she made life worth living. Her artful manner touched more than imagined. She will be missed.
Baldwin was predeceased by her hus-band, John; her brother, Michael Bozak, and a sister, Louise Bozak Shaw.
She is survived by her sister, Sister Bernadette Ann, of Wilkes-Barre, Pa.; her six children, Anne Ruth Baldwin, and her husband, Mike Bremer, of Spanola, N.M., Karen “Kee” Baldwin-Payne, and her husband, David Payne, of Portland, Mary Louise Baldwin, of Portland, Harry Baldwin, and his wife, Nancy Lucas, of Mooresville, N.C., John Baldwin, and his wife, Pilar Lorenzo, of Miami Shores, Fla, Robert Baldwin, of Portland; and her grandchildren Wesley Lucas, Jessica Lynn, and her husband, Taylor Schoppee, Emily Jane, Zachary David, Allyson Ma-rie, and Grace Anne.
Funeral services will be private.
Deborah Golden Bargad, 52PORTLAND – Deborah Golden
Bargad, 52, of Portland, died April 1 at Mercy Hospital.
She was born Feb 10, 1961, in Brook-line, Mass., the daughter of Martin and Martha Bargad. She grew up in Peabody, Mass., and lived for the last 10 years in Portland.
Bargad enjoyed many hobbies, includ-ing going to the movies, going out to eat and shopping. She loved to knit, and was a member of various knitting clubs. She was an avid reader of a wide range of books and had an extensive book col-lection. She especially enjoyed spending time at holidays and gatherings with her companion Ken Reynolds’ family.
Bargad was predeceased by her par-
ents.She is survived by her brother, Sam
Bargad, of Los Angeles; her aunt, Sandra Gould, her cousin, Noah Weinstein, her longtime companion, Ken Reynolds, of Portland; and her close friends, Donna Dusseault, and her husband, Art, of South Portland.
A celebration of Bargad’s life was held last Saturday. Arrangements were provided by A.T. Hutchins Funeral and Cremation Services of Portland.Baldwin
Portland String Quartetwith
Pianist, Laura KargulSunday, April 21, 2 pm
Woodfords Congregational ChurchSponsors ~ OceanView and The Highlands
LARK Society for Chamber Music (207) 761-1522 ~ www.larksociety.org
April 10, 201314 Portland www.theforecaster.net
Send us your newsWant to submit news for the School Notebook page? The best way is to send your announcement to our new e-mail address, [email protected].
Cheverus students chosen for Seeds of Peace camp
Six Cheverus High School students have been selected to join others from across the world to attend the Seeds of Peace International Camp, located on Pleasant Lake, in Otisfield. The camp provides a three-week conflict resolution program where the students will address the issues that fuel hatred, violence and oppression.
Students live together in bunks, share meals, play sports, and engage in group sessions about their political conflict facilitated by adult counselors.
The Cheverus students are Caroline George, sophomore, of Limington, Anna Niedermeyer, sophomore, of Buxton, Eva Niedermeyer, sophomore, of Buxton, Nicholas Jensen, junior, of Kennebunk, Lisette Labbe, junior, of Limerick, and Katherine Randall, junior, of South
Portland.The Seeds of Peace program was
founded in 1993 by journalist John Wal-lach. The mission of the organization is to inspire and equip new generations of leaders from regions of conflict with the relationships, understanding, and skills needed to advance lasting peace.
Cheverus jazz choirs bring home awards from state jazz competition
Two jazz vocal groups from Cheverus High School won awards last weekend at the Maine High School State Vocal Jazz Festival in Ellsworth. Under the direction of Music Director Christopher Humphrey, the Cheverus Jazz Singers brought home a third place trophy in their division. The a capella jazz group, Soulstice, won second place as well as a Gold Award for excellence in their sepa-rate division.
South Portland junior Hannah John-ston, Yarmouth senior Erin Fitzpatrick, Gorham senior Ian Lawson, and Portland junior Christian Cilley were also recog-nized as outstanding soloists, selected by festival judges. Cheverus singers earned half the awards given to individual sing-ers.
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15April 10, 2013
INSIDE
Sports RoundupPage 19
Editor’s noteIf you have a story idea, a score/cancellation to report, feedback, or any other sports-related information, feel free to e-mail us at [email protected]
Spring Preview upcomingThe Forecaster will present its Spring Sports Preview
over the next two weeks. Lacrosse and tennis will be previewed in next week’s edition. Baseball, softball and track the following week. Our traditional detailed capsule previews of every sport at each school in our coverage area will be available at theforecaster.net beginning next week.
Winter Coaches of the YearBy Michael Hoffer
Coach of the YearBoys’ Team
RICH HENRY, Waynflete Bas-ketball
For lead-ing the Fly-ers to their best season e v e r a n d completing a marvelous program res-toration pro-cess, Henry gets out nod as Port-land edition Coach of the Year, of a boys’ team.
Henry grew up in Milwaukee and was good enough to play at the college level, first at North Dakota State and later at the Uni-versity of Maine, playing for some very talented Black Bears teams that could never get past Reggie Lewis-led Northeastern University come tournament time.
Henry didn’t seek out a coach-ing career, but he wound up on the sidelines. He learned of an opening at Waynflete and took over the eighth grade program before inheriting the boys’ varsity in 2004-05 with the Flyers coming off successive 0-16 seasons.
Henry got Waynflete into the win column not just once, but five times his first season and after they moved up to Class C, he led the Flyers to 14 wins and the quarterfinals in his third year. By 2011, Henry had Waynflete in the semifinals and they returned last winter.
That all paled in comparison to this season.
The Flyers opened with a play-off loss-avenging victory over Old Orchard Beach and never looked back, winning 15 of 16 regular
season games to post the best record in program annals.
Henry, whose coaching style emphasizes calm and poise, uti-lized his whole roster and Wayn-flete was solid on both ends of the floor.
The Flyers kept the good times rolling in the playoffs, handling Monmouth in the quarterfinals before really turning heads with a thrilling, come-from-behind win over defending champion Dirigo in the semifinals. Key contribu-tions from bench players were critical in both wins, emphasizing the job Henry did building depth during the regular season. The fun and the run finally ended with a loss to perennial power Booth-bay in the regional final, but it’s impossible to look at Waynflete’s season as anything but an unquali-fied success.
“I had a good feeling coming in, but the question marks were lead-ership and ability to play defense,” said Henry. “The captains did a great job. We had great seniors.”
Henry, who works in finance at Unum and lives in Cape Eliza-beth, plans to coach for awhile, which is good news for Waynflete, which should be very strong again next season.
Rich Henry, our Portland edi-tion Coach of the Year of a boys’ team, has taken the Flyers pro-gram from the depths of not win-ning a single game to establishing them as a regular contender for a championship. That’s worthy of high praise indeed.
2011-12 winner: Dan LeGage (Deering Basketball)
2010-11 winner: Joe Russo (Portland Basketball)
2009-10 winner: Bob Brown (Cheverus Basketball)
2008-09 winner: Kevin Haley (Cheverus Swimming)
2007-08 winner: Bob Brown (Cheverus Basketball)
2006-07 winner: Bob Brown (Cheverus Basketball)
2005-06 winner: Dan LeGage (Deering Basketball)
2004-05 winner: Jack Lowry (Cheverus Hockey)
2003-04 winner: Joe Russo (Portland Basketball)
Coach of the YearGirls’ team
BRANDON SALWAY, Wayn-flete Basketball
Salway gets this honor for the second year in a row after lead-ing Waynflete to its first Class C state cham-pionship and helping his s u p e r s t a r player, senior Martha Ve-roneau, earn the most cov-eted honor in the state.
Salway grew up in Bethel and attended Telstar High School, where he played soccer, basketball and baseball. He played a year of basketball at Dean College, then two years of soccer at the University of Southern Maine. Salway got involved with coach-ing his final year at USM. He had a previous stint coaching the girls’ basketball team at Waynflete, spent some time with the boys’ program, then returned to the girls’ for the 2007-08 season.
The Flyers had knocked on the door several times, reaching the regional final three times in four seasons, but that’s as far as they were able to advance. With a special senior core back for
one final run, Waynflete liked its chances coming into the season, but with that came pressure and expectations.
The Flyers rose to the occa-sion, winning 15 of 18 regular season games, losing only to Western B champion Lake Region and Western B contenders Cape Elizabeth and Wells. Waynflete earned the fourth seed in Western C, but made the regional field its personal playground, dominating Carrabec, Dirigo, Boothbay and Madison to finally punch its ticket to the state game.
By halftime of the final at the Bangor Auditorium, however, it didn’t look like the Flyers were going to have a very pleasant ex-perience as a slow start and foul trouble spelled a daunting deficit to a Calais squad playing in a familiar setting.
Like Salway, Waynflete never panicked, stayed poised and con-fident and slowly chipped away. A Veroneau 3 gave the Flyers the lead for good and she clinched the crown with two late free throws as Waynflete finished it off, 59-55.
Six days later, Veroneau was named Miss Maine Basketball as the finest senior player in the state.
“Brandon is the best coach I’ve ever played for,” said Veroneau, Waynflete’s Winter Female Ath-lete of the Year. “He brings out the best in all of his players on and off the court. He gets people to play
the right way. He stresses sports-manship. He’s a great role model.”
As he has in basketball, Salway has also coached the Waynflete boys’ soccer program to over 200 wins. He lives in Old Orchard Beach, is also a physical educa-tion teacher and the school’s as-sistant athletic director.
Brandon Salway, our Portland edition Coach of the Year of a girls’ team, has shown he can win games regardless of the talent. He has the respect and admiration of his players. This winter, he got to bask in the limelight of being a state champion coach at last, but in truth, he’s been a champion for a long, long time.
2011-12 winner: Brandon Sal-way (Waynflete Basketball)
2010-11 winner: Amy Vachon (McAuley Basketball)
2009-10 winner: J.P. Lavoie (Cheverus Hockey)
2008-09 winner: Mike Murphy (Deering Basketball)
2007-08 winner: John Smith (McAuley Swimming)
2006-07 winner: Jan Veinot (Waynflete Basketball)
2005-2006 winner: Kevin Campbell (Deering Indoor track)
2004-2005 winner: Lindsay Reagan (Waynflete Nordic skiing)
2003-2004 winner: Mike D’Andrea (Deering Basketball)Sports Editor Michael Hoffer can be reached at [email protected]. Follow him on
Twitter: @foresports.
Salway
Henry
Wing replaces LeGage as Deering boys’ hoops coachBy Michael Hoffer
PORTLAND—Not just anybody could fill the big and successful coaching shoes of Dan LeGage, but luckily for the Deer-ing boys’ basketball program, Todd Wing was ready and waiting.
Wing, 36, who spent the past five seasons as LeGage’s assistant, as well as the Rams’ junior varsity coach, was named the program’s new head coach Wednesday by Deering athletic director Mel Craig.
“I’m ecstatic,” Wing said. “I’ve waited my turn and it’s worked out. I know the kids. Dan allowed me to do a lot of hands-on stuff. It’s going to be a seamless transition.”
LeGage stepped down last month after an 11-year run which resulted in 143 victories and the school’s only two state championships.
“I’m happy for Todd, for the program and I’m happy for the kids,” LeGage said. “They’re comfortable with him. He’s getting rewarded for the five years he worked with me. He did the work. He’s been like a sponge. Anytime an organization can show they have the capacity to build great leadership from within, it’s a great thing.”
Craig echoed that theme.“(Todd’s) was the application I hoped
to see,” Craig said. “He’s been with Dan and is familiar with the program. There was a lot of interest, but anytime you have a quality guy in-house, it makes my job easier. I’m confident he’ll pick up and continue the winning tradition while making the program his own and taking it to the next level. Following on the heels of the best is tough, but we’re very pleased.”
Wing played basketball (as well as soccer and track) at Telstar High School and played one year of basketball at St. Joseph’s College. He spent five years as an assistant to Rob Sanicola at St. Joe’s before joining LeGage at Deering. Wing played an integral role in the Rams’ run to the 2011-12 Class A title.
He’s committed to keeping Deering one of the state’s premier programs.
“Dan has built a tradition that reloads,” Wing said. “He left it in a position where the next coach can be successful. We have motivated kids. It’s a program of integrity.”
LeGage thinks Wing is ready.“I knew when I approached (Todd) five
years ago to coach with me that some-day he would be a head coach,” LeGage said. “He’s a student of the game. He had great Xs and Os knowledge. Having
gone through a championship season and coaching in Portland with dynamics that are different than anywhere else, prepared him for the job. A lot of what we do know already has his thumbprint.”
Wing lives in Portland with his wife, six-year-old son and four-year-old daugh-ter and teaches in Windham. A first head coaching job in the toughest league in the state could be a daunting challenge, but he embraces the opportunity.
“I wouldn’t want it any other way,” Wing said. “I’m going to thrive in the pressure. I’m going to bring a lot of energy and stability. I feel we’ll be suc-cessful.”
“I think he’ll be there a long time,” LeGage said.
Sports Editor Michael Hoffer can be reached at [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter: @
foresports.
April 10, 201316 Portland www.theforecaster.net
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Waynflete skier caps memorable year
Louis Frumer, the lone member of the Waynflete Alpine ski team, had a winter to remember. Frumer won the Class C slalom and was third in the giant slalom. The Western Maine Conference all-star then placed first in the GS and eighth in the slalom at the “Shootout” (all classes of high schools competing), to qualify for the Maine state team at the Eastern High School Championships, where finished ninth out of 120 boys (first from the Maine) in the GS.
17April 10, 2013 Portlandwww.theforecaster.net
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FMI: 207/874-1069 or www.bgcmaine.org.
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Team registration is $1,000, or $200 per individual.*All proceeds benefit the two charities. Be sure to buyraffle tickets for your chance to win lots of great prizesand packages! Five for $20, two for $10, or $5 for one.
On June 5th, don’t miss the celebratory lobster bakeand live auction at Wolfe’s Neck Farm in Freeport.**We will award winning teams and individual prizes,and draw raffle and door prize winners. Boys & GirlsClubs’ EIN is 01-0211543.
*Individual registrants will be assigned to teams of five, based on your three berth choices. **Tickets to the lobster bake are $40 for all non-event participants. Cash bar will be available.
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Silver linings exist for Sox fansBy Bryan O’Connor
Sun shines cordially on the brim of your cap, a welcome respite from the biting cold in the nearby shade. Meticu-lously manicured grass sparkles proudly, unaware that the last patch of snow is clinging for its life in your yard back home. Familiar songs blare from the loudspeaker as grown men stretch and toss on the field below. April has come to rescue us from another dismal winter and baseball makes spring’s arrival official. There’s no better time to be alive than the beginning of baseball season.
Unless, of course, you’re a Red Sox fan.
It’s been an ugly couple of years in New England. In 2011, winter came early, as the Red Sox lost 20 of their last 27 games after starting 83-52 and look-ing like a solid bet to win another World Series. In 2012, summer never came, as Boston started 1-5, sputtered to a .500 record at the All-Star break, then fell apart and shipped off two of their prize acquisitions from the 2011 offseason.
Rather than retooling with another cadre of elite free agents or rebuilding with low-cost talent, the Red Sox took a rather unsettling middle road in the offseason. They brought in Mike Napoli despite a harrowing medical report that completely reshaped his contract. They signed Shane Victorino, perhaps hoping he can duplicate Cody Ross’s 2011 per-formance for the next three years despite signs that he’s slowing down. They added veteran starter Ryan Dempster, who’s had a handful of great years in the National League, but struggled in a brief stint with the Rangers last summer. They added relievers Joel Hanrahan and Koji Uehara, who should be upgrades, but neither will pitch more than 75 innings in 2013. And Johnny Gomes is on the team for some reason.
Throw in a David Ross here and a Stephen Drew there and this is not a bad team, but it’s not the Manny-Ortiz-Pedro juggernaut we’ve become accustomed to in Boston. The pitching is still thin, with Jon Lester regressing at an alarming rate, Clay Buchholz never having pitched 200 innings or struck out 130 batters in a season and the mere thought of John Lackey on the mound more terrifying in Massachusetts than the prospect of a Sarah Palin presidency.
Furthermore, the American League East has been a gauntlet for a decade and with the Orioles winning 93 games last year and the Blue Jays claiming available talent over the winter like Bobby Jenks claiming hors d’ouvres at the postgame buffet, the Red Sox seem far more likely to finish last than first in 2013.
But are the chances of a division title really that bleak?
The Yankees listen to Lawrence Welk in the clubhouse before games. Most Yankees spent this offseason wagging fingers and yelling at kids to stay off their lawns. Some Yankees even remember when Clint Eastwood’s diaper wasn’t visible through his pants. Even with C.C. Sabathia and Robinson Cano, can they hold up for 162 games?
The Orioles won a lot of games last year, but they only had two players worth as many as three Wins Above Replace-
ment (per fangraphs). For reference, the Rangers, who won the same number of games, had six. No pitcher on the 2012 Orioles has a track record of Major League success, yet they made no moves to strengthen the staff, or for that matter, the lineup, which batted just .247 last season and was below average by just about any metric.
The Rays have one of the game’s best rotations, but their starting first baseman and designated hitter early this season are James Loney and Shelley Duncan, who might have been the neighbors on “All in the Family.” If Evan Longoria struggles to stay on the field, as he has
in recent years, this could be a truly im-potent lineup.
The Blue Jays are the favorites to win the division. With Jose Reyes and Melky Cabrera setting the table, Jose Bautista and Edwin Encarnacion providing clout
in the middle of the order, and four aces in the rotation, Toronto is a popular pick to win the World Series. But R.A. Dickey has never pitched well in the American League, Josh Johnson and Brandon
continued page 18
April 10, 201318 Portland www.theforecaster.net
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Local basketball players win tournament
Girls from Falmouth, Portland and South Portland earned the Zero Gravity Northern New England 4th grade championship last weekend. Front row (from left): Karley Piers, Helena Bolduc, Cameron Birks, Sarah Talon, Mia Skinner. Back row: Ally Hanlon, Neve Cawley, Kayla Conley, Devin Quinn, Lauren Welch, Liza Rogers, Coach Birks.
Morrow are more familiar with the trainer’s room than the pitcher’s mound and Mark Buehrle gave up 26 homers in the National League East last year. Fur-thermore, the bottom of the lineup isn’t as strong as Boston’s, at least as long as Adam Lind is wasting at-bats like reality shows taking primetime TV spots.
Boston’s lineup might not be the best in the division this year, but as long as all the Yankees you’ve heard of are on the disabled list, it’s not far behind Toronto for second. The bullpen doesn’t have a Mariano Rivera, but it should be the best in Boston in years. And the rota-tion- well, it could be bad, but who’s to say it can’t be good? Lester is still just 29, looked solid this spring, and was a legitimate number one starter as recently as 2010. Buchholz pitched well down the stretch last year and has a career ERA under four. Dempster has over 550 strike-outs over the last three seasons, and Felix Doubront struck out 167 in 161 innings as a rookie last year. It’s even possible that Lackey is healthy for the first time in a Red Sox uniform and could pitch more like the ace he was from 2005 to 2007 than the joker he’s been since 2010.
And perhaps best of all, the bumbling reign of Bobby Valentine is over. Former Sox pitching coach John Farrell has the same luxury FDR had in succeeding Hoover: things can only go up from here.
On paper, this Red Sox team has something like 85-win talent. It’s easy to see the pitching falling apart, Lester and Jacoby Ellsbury getting traded mid-season and another sub-70-win finish. But it’s also possible that Ellsbury and Dustin Pedroia are two of the best play-ers in baseball again, as they were in 2011, that a stacked bullpen holds leads turned over by an adequate rotation, that Jackie Bradley, Jr. continues to electrify fans throughout his rookie season and that no other team in the AL East has a great year.
Red Sox fans who came of age in the current millennium are accustomed to expecting more than a sliver of a chance at the division if everything breaks right. But maybe this is the way baseball is supposed to be. A team with a few stars and a lot of decent role players faces an uphill battle. This is what baseball is like most years in Chicago and Cleveland and Milwaukee and Seattle. Fans start with hope, catch a few breaks and hit a few snags along the way, and more often than not, start dreaming of next year by midsummer.
But if the games still count when the shade is a welcome break from the sun, when the grass, no matter how me-ticulously manicured, shows evidence of cleats chasing fly balls in the gap, when snow is as distant a memory as Ted Wil-liams’s swing or Cy Young’s fastball, it feels not like a birthright, but like a miracle.
Bryan O’Connor lives in South Port-land, where he obsesses about saber-metrics and the Hall of Fame in the offseason. Read more of his work at Replacement Level Baseball Blog (http://replacementlevel.wordpress.com) and High Heat Stats (http://highheatstats.com).
Red Soxfrom page 17
19April 10, 2013 Portlandwww.theforecaster.net
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RoundupPAYSA holding skills program, tryouts
The Portland Area Youth Soccer Association is sponsoring a six-week Spring Skills n Scrimmage program on Sundays for children in the U-6 to U-8 age groupds. Coaches from the Portland Phoenix club team will teach basic skills at Portland’s Presumscot School. Players receive a ball and jersey. The program begins May 12 and is $49. PAYSA is
also holding fall travel team tryouts Sunday, May 5 at Fitzpatrick Stadium in Portland. The program runs from mid-August through October and boys and girls U-10 through U-14 are eligible. FMI, paysasoccer.com.
SMCC players honoredSouthern Maine Community College
baseball player Alex Brown, a sopho-more outfielder, was recently named the Yankee Small College Conference
Player of the Week after a walkoff hit in a win over Bridgton Academy and three hits and two RBI in a win over Briar-cliffe. Freshman softball player Lindsey
Howell, a third baseman, was named the YSCC softball Player of the Week after getting two hits and an RBI against Briarcliffe.
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theforecaster.netFor more information call 781-3661
Published: week of April 24Deadline for space and copy:Friday, April 19
Green living is now a way of life.
As a society, we are often striving for healthier waysto live and to have a smaller impact on the Earth.Whether this means organic food, solar panels,homeopathic medicine, practicing yoga, or keepingyour carbon footprint smaller by recycling, we aremaking smarter and more informed choices.
Join the Forecaster the week of April 24 as wepublish our Green Living special section.Your ad willgo out to over150,000potentialcustomers.Let them knowhow you canhelp them live ahealthier, morebalanced, greenerlife.
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Send us your newsPeople & Business is compiled by our news assistant, Noah Hurowitz, who can be reached at 781-3661 ext. 115. Announcements should be e-mailed to [email protected].
Good Deeds
People’s United Community Founda-tion, the philanthropic arm of People’s United Bank, has awarded $3,000 to Community Financial Literacy. Founded in 2008, CFL empowers refugees, im-migrants and low-income individuals in the Portland and Lewiston/Auburn areas through financial education. The organi-zation offers three free financial literacy courses, and one-on-one free financial counseling. To date, CFL has helped more than 600 people. The foundation also awarded $7,500 to Maine Housing and Building Materials Exchange. The grant will support the BME Building Materials Supply Fund, which offers new and recycled roofing, exterior doors and heating systems at an affordable price to low-income homeowners, allowing eligible participants to maintain, repair and improve their homes.
Mechanics Savings Bank donated $500 to the Bath Area Family YMCA Freedom Tour Program. The program teaches eighth-grade students how his-
tory and culture have influence in social behavior, impact the world today, and focuses on building leadership, self-esteem, and conflict resolution skills. The program concludes with a week-long trip to Washington, D.C., Pennsylvania, and New York City.
Recognition
Mid Coast Senior Health Center’s Mere Point Long-Term Nursing Home and Bodwell Nursing and Rehabilitation Facility were recently recognized in the 2013 US News and World Report’s Best Nursing Homes list for being among the highest rated in Maine. The list is comprised of those facilities with a rat-ing of five stars from the federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services for their overall performance in health in-spections, nurse staffing, and quality of medical care. About 30 percent of Maine nursing homes earned an overall five-star rating, and Mid Coast’s Mere Point is one of two facilities in Mid-coast Maine
continued page 21Ask about Art Courses opento high school juniors and seniors. Earn college credit!
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that received the highest possible rating. Secretary of State Matthew Dunlap
recognized the Merriconeag Grange in Harpswell for achieving 100 years of incorporation during its March 1 anni-versary celebration.
Six attorneys from Lambert Coffin, a law firm with offices in Portland and Blue Hill, where it does business as Lam-bert Coffin Hanley, have been named in the 2012 New England Super Lawyers publication. Those designated as Super Lawyers include John F. Lambert Jr., for civil litigation; Samuel K. Rudman and Peter Del Bianco, for general litiga-tion; and Philip M. Coffin, for medical malpractice defense. Associates Jeffrey D. Russell and Maureen M. Sturtevant were named Rising Stars in the field of medical malpractice defense.
Tedford Housing Executive Direc-tor Craig Phillips recently presented Topsham Girl Scout Troop 966 with a Certificate of Recognition. During the past year the Scouts collected, sorted and boxed food for Tedford’s family shelters in Brunswick and low-income housing units in Brunswick and Bath. The Scouts also provided birthday boxes for children and the family shelter. Several of the Scouts are working to earn Silver Awards in Leadership. The Silver Award is the highest level of recognition a Girl Scout cadette can earn, and recognizes demon-strated leadership in planning and execut-ing projects improving the community. Tedford Housing thanks the Scouts and their leader, Aleta Pickins, for their gen-erosity. Tedford Housing works to end homelessness in the Mid-Coast, Auburn, Lewiston and Augusta by providing, in collaboration with others, shelter, hous-ing and services to those in need.
New Hires & Promotions
John Wasileski and Seacoast Man-agement recently hired Michael Todd as director of sales and marketing at Highland Green in Topsham. Beginning March 25, Todd joined Will Honan and Amber Grant as part of the sales team. Prior joining Highland Green, Todd was director of development at Mid Coast Health Services, sales director at Thornton Oaks Retirement Community in Brunswick, and vice president of sales for Coventry Resources of Baltimore.
The Iris Network announced Dareth Law is now organization’s low vision occupational therapist and Low Vision Clinic coordinator. A graduate of Queen Margaret University in Edinburgh, Scot-land, Law worked as an occupational therapist in the United Kingdom and has also worked with individuals with congenital blindness, vision loss second-ary to cerebral palsy, head injuries and strokes in San Francisco, Milwaukee and Pittsburgh.
Appointments
South Portland resident Tollef Olson was recently named to the board of direc-tors of Friends of Casco Bay. Olson has been a commercial fisherman, marine salvage diver, urchin harvester, blue mus-sel grower, and now a principal in Ocean Approved, a company that develops kelp products such as kelp noodles, kelp slaw, and kelp salad.
Accreditation
United Ambulance Service has recently earned full re-accreditation from the Commission on Accreditation of Ambu-lance Services. To date, United remains as the first and only nationally accredited ground ambulance service in Maine.
People & businessfrom page 20
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Arts CalendarAll ongoing calendar listings can now be found online at theforecaster.net.Send your calendar listing by e-mail to [email protected], by fax to 781-2060 or by mail to 5 Fundy Road, Falmouth, ME 04105.
Greater PortlandBooks & AuthorsSaturday 4/20Record Store Day, book signing with John Densmore of The Doors, 2 p.m., Bull Moose, 456 Payne Road, Scarborough, 775-2126.
FilmWednesday 4/10“Mea Maxima Culpa: Silence in the House of God,” part of the Maine Deaf Film Festival, 7:30 p.m., SPACE Gallery, 538 Congress St., Portland, 828-5600.
Tuesday 4/16“Wreck It Ralph!” 1 p.m., Free-port Community Library, 10 Library Drive, Freeport, 865-3307.
Saturday 4/20“It’s a Disaster,” 7:30 p.m., SPACE Gallery, 538 Congress St., Portland, 828-5600.
Friday 4/12“Lake Windfall, US,” part of the Maine Deaf Film Festival, 7 p.m., Luther Bonney Hall, 92 Bedford St., Portland.
“Lore,” 6:30 p.m., Portland Muse-um of Art, 7 Congress St., Portland, 775-6148 ext. 3223.
Saturday 4/13Maine Deaf Film Festival, 1-10:30 p.m., Luther Bonney Hall, 92 Bedford St., Portland, mainedeaf-filmfest.com.
“Lore,” 2 p.m., Portland Museum of Art, 7 Congress St., Portland, 775-6148 ext. 3223.
Sunday 4/14“Lore,” 2 p.m., Portland Museum of Art, 7 Congress St., Portland, 775-6148 ext. 3223.
GalleriesFriday 4/12Compositions in Wood by Carol Kainlor, 5:50 p.m., Thomas Memo-rial Library, 6 Scott Dyer Road, Cape Elizabeth, 741-5166.
MuseumsOngoingChildren’s Museum and Theatre of Maine, ongoing cultural, edu-cational, fun and active workshops for kids and parents, 142 Free St., Portland, 828-1234 or kitetails.com.
Fifth Maine Regiment Museum, by appointment, 45 Seashore Ave., Peaks Island, 766-3330, fifthmaine-museum.org.
International Cryptozoology Museum, 661 Congress St., Port-land, cryptozoologymuseum.com.
Maine Historical Society Mu-seum, Images of the Longfellow Garden, current exhibits, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Monday-Saturday; 12-5 p.m.
Sun.; 11 a.m.-12 p.m. children’s hour Monday and Wednesday; $8 adult, $3 child, 489 Congress St., Portland, 774-1822 or mainehis-tory.org.
Maine Irish Heritage Center, 34 Gray St., Portland, 780-0118, main-eirish.com.
Maine Jewish Museum, formerly called Tree of Life at Etz Chaim, open Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m.- 2 p.m. or by appointment, 267 Congress St., Portland, Gary Berenson, 329-9854, treeoflifemuseum.org.
The Maine Narrow Gauge Rail-road Company and Museum, daily trains from 11 a.m. - 4 p.m., on the hour, from the museum, 58 Fore St., Portland, 828-0814, tickets, $10 adult, $9 senior, $6 child ages 3-12, price includes admission to museum.
Museum of African Culture, 13 Brown St., Portland, 871-7188 or museumafricanculture.org.
Neal Dow Memorial, 714 Con-gress St., Portland, tours 11 a.m. - 4 p.m. Monday-Friday, 773-7773, mewctu.org.
Portland Fire Museum, open first Fridays 6-9 p.m., $5 adults, $2 children age 7-plus, 157 Spring St., Portland, portlandfiremuseum.com.
Portland Museum of Art, 10 a.m.- 5 p.m. Tuesday-Thursday, Saturday and Sunday; and 10 a.m.- 9 p.m. Friday; free on Fridays 5-9 p.m., first Fridays, 7 Congress Square, Portland, 775-6148, portlandmu-seum.org
Portland Observatory, 138 Con-gress St., Portland, 774-5561.
The Sabbathday Lake Shaker Museum and the Shaker Store, by appointment, Route 26, New Gloucester, 926-4597, shaker.lib.me.us.
Skyline Farm Carriage and Sleigh Museum, by appointment, free/donations accepted, 95 The Lane,
North Yarmouth, skylinefarm.org, 829-9203 .
Spring Point Ledge Lighthouse, SMCC campus, off Fort Road, South Portland, springpointlight.org, 799-6337.
Victoria Mansion, self-guided tours, 109 Danforth St., Portland, 772-4841, victoriamansion.org.
Yarmouth Historical Society Mu-seum, Life Along the Royal River, 1-5 p.m. Tuesday-Friday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday, Merrill Memorial Library, Main Street, Yarmouth, 846-6259.
MusicWednesday 4/10Standard Issue: Jazz from the Great American Songbook, 6 p.m., Gingko Blue, 455 Fore St., Portland, 541-9190.
Thursday 4/11Jonathan Biss with the Elias String Quartet, 7:30 p.m., Hannaford Lec-ture Hall 88 Bedford St., Portland, 842-0800.
Gypsy Caravan, 8 p.m., Gingko Blue, 455 Fore St., Portland, 541-9190.
Friday 4/12MAMM Adult Rock and Roll Camp, 6:30 p.m., Breakwater School, 856 Brighton Ave., Portland, $200, to register for the weekend go to maineacademyofmodernmusic.org/camps, or call 899-3433.
Daisy Castro’s Gypsy Moth Quintet, 8 p.m., One Longfellow Square,181 State St., Portland, 761-1757.
Rick Miller and His Band, 9 p.m., Gingko Blue, 455 Fore St., Portland, 541-9190.
Saturday 4/13MAMM Adult Rock and Roll Camp, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Breakwater School, 856 Brighton Ave., Portland, $200,
continued page 23
23April 10, 2013 Portlandwww.theforecaster.net
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Arts Calendar
from previous page
Michael Vermette’s watercolor, “Reid State Park,”is among the works he will discuss at an April 20-21 workshop on plein aire painting at Centre Street Arts Gallery. The workshop
opens with a reception, April 19, at the gallery at 10 Centre St., in Bath.
Local painter leads workshop in Bathto register for the weekend go to maineacademyofmodernmusic.org/camps, or call 899-3433.
Matt Costa, 12:30 p.m., Bull Moose, 456 Payne Road, Scarborough, 775-2126.
Willy Porter, 8 p.m., One Longfel-low Square, 181 State St., Portland, 761-1757.
Tommy O’Connell & The Juke Joint Devils, Gingko Blue, 455 Fore St., Portland, 541-9190.
Sunday 4/14MAMM Adult Rock and Roll Camp, 12:30 p.m.-5 p.m., Break-water School, 856 Brighton Ave., Portland, $200, to register for the weekend go to maineacademyof-modernmusic.org/camps or call 899-3433.
Wednesday 4/17Lorraine Bohland with Terry Foster, Gingko Blue, 455 Fore St., Portland, 541-9190.
Thursday 4/18Mike James’ Blue Lions, Gingko Blue, 455 Fore St., Portland, 541-9190.
Friday 4/19Travis James Humphrey and the Retro Rockets, 9 p.m., Gingko Blue, 455 Fore St., Portland, 541-9190.
Saturday 4/20Poor Howard & Bullfrog, 5 p.m., Gingko Blue, 455 Fore St., Portland, 541-9190.
Record Store Day, with perfor-mance by Phantom Buffalo, 6 p.m., Bull Moose, 151 Middle St., Port-land, 775-2126.
Sunday 4/21Portland String Quartet, 2 p.m., Woodfords Congregational Church, 202 Woodfords St., Port-land, 415-0880.
Poke Chop & The Other White Meats, 9 p.m., Gingko Blue, 455 Fore St., Portland, 541-9190.
OngoingCommunity Chorus, rehearsals 10 a.m. - noon, first and third Saturday, the St. Lawrence Arts Center, 76 Congress St., Portland, 775-5568, ext. 102 or [email protected].
David Bullard Songwriter Night, 6 p.m. Tuesdays, Andy’s Pub,
Commercial St.; Solo Night 6 p.m. Thursdays, Slainte Wine Bar, 24 Preble St., Portland.
House Bluegrass, 9 p.m. Mondays, no cover, Empire Dine & Dance, 575 Congress St., Portland.
Kirtan!, call and response group chanting meditation, 7-8:30 p.m., first and third Fridays, $5 dona-tion, Portland Yoga Studio, 616 Congress St., Portland, 799-0054, portlandyoga.com.
Lazy Lightning, Grateful Dead covers and original music, 9 p.m. Wednesdays, The Big Easy, 55 Mar-ket St., bigeasyportland.com or 776-2822.
Theater & Dance“The Drowsy Chaperone,” April 12-27, Fridays at 8 p.m., Sundays at 2 p.m., Lyric Music Theater, 176 Sawyer St., South Portland, 799-1421.
Friday 4/19“HAIR,” 8 p.m., Merrill Auditorium, 20 Myrtle St., Portland, 824-0800.
OngoingArgentine Tango Practice , Wednesday 7-9 p.m., beginner les-son 7 p.m., $10; Ballroom Dance Party, Saturday 8 p.m.- midnight, beginner lesson 7 p.m., $7; Maine Ballroom Dance, 614 Congress St., Portland.
Club 188, line dancing instruction, Wednesday, 7-8 p.m. beginners; 8-9 p.m. intermediate; 9-9:30 p.m. advanced; 188 Warren Ave., Port-land.
Greater Portland Community Contradance, first Saturday, 7:15 p.m. lesson, 8 p.m. main dance, $9 adult, $5 child, Falmouth Congre-gational Church Hall, 267 Falmouth Road, new dancers welcome, no partner needed, 756-2201.
Maplewood Dance Center, night classes followed by dance socials on Wednesdays, Fridays and Sat-urdays, 383 Warren Ave., Portland, 878-0584, maplewooddancecen-ter.com.
Irish Set Dancing, 7-9 p.m. Thursdays, Yarmouth Community Services building, 200 Main St., Yarmouth, [email protected].
Second Saturday Contradance, 6 p.m. family dance; 7:30 p.m. potluck; 8 p.m. beginner lesson; 8:30-12 p.m. dance, $10 adult/ $7 student or senior, bring clean
shoes, Wescustogo Hall, Route 115, North Yarmouth, 233-4325, [email protected] or 318-8746, [email protected].
Square Dancing Classes, by Mix ‘n Mingle Square Dancing Club, 6:30-8 p.m. Thursdays through April, ages 9 and up, $3, no experience necessary, Eight Corners School, 22 Mussey Road, Scarborough, [email protected].
Mid CoastAuditions/Calls for ArtBrunswick 2013 Hometown Idol is seeking participants for this year’s contest, held April 27 at 7 p.m. at the Orion Performing Arts Center in Topsham. Applications are available in Brunswick, Top-sham and Harpswell schools and at Shaw’s at Cook’s Coner and Riley Insurance. For more information visit brunswickmainerotary.org or e-mail rotaryhometownidol@
comcast.net.
Tuesday 4/23Nor’Easters Chorus open House, 7 p.m., Bath United Methodist Church, 340 Oak Grove, Bath, 729-4062, open to all men.
FilmTuesday 4/23“Switch: Discover the Future of En-ergy,” 7 p.m., Searles Hall, Bowdoin College, 5000 South St., Brunswick, 512-861-6268 ext. 500.
GalleriesSaturday 4/13The Joy of the Lens, 1 p.m., Crook-er Gallery at the Topsham Public Library, 25 Foreside Road, Top-sham, 725-1727.
Friday 4/19Michael Vermette, artist recep-tion, 5 p.m., Centre St. Arts Gallery, 11 Centre St., Bath, 442-0300.
MuseumsThursday 4/11Caribou Antler Carvings, Tues-day-Saturday 10 a.m. – 5 p.m., Sunday 2-5 p.m., Peary-MacMillan Arctic Museum, 9500 College St., Brunswick, 725-3416.
OngoingBowdoin College Museum of Art, 9400 College Station, Brunswick, 725-3275.
Maine Maritime Museum, open daily 9:30 a.m.- 5 p.m., 243 Wash-ington St., Bath, 443-1316 or mainemaritimemuseum.org.
Peary-MacMillan Arctic Museum, Hubbard Hall, Bowdoin College, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Tuesdays-Saturdays; 2 p.m.-5 p.m., Sundays; closed Mon-days, 725-3416, bowdoin.edu/arctic-museum.
Pejepscot Historical Society Mu-seum, CSI Brunswick: The Forensic Work of Dr. Frank Whittier, and Pejepscot”s Early Scots-Irish His-tory, Monday-Saturday, 10 a.m.- 4 p.m., free, 159 Park Row, Brunswick, 729-6606.
69,500 weekly circulation covering the coastline from Scarborough to Bath
www.theforecaster.net • 781-3661
Your Hometown Newspaper with 4 editions: Portland • North • Mid-Coast • South
April 10, 201324 Portland www.theforecaster.net
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Independent education fromEarly Childhood through Grade 12 Waynflete
Discover WaynfleteView the Campus, Visit Classes, Meet the Head of School
lower, middle, and upper schoolsThursday, April 11, 20138:30 to 10:30 a.m.
contact the admission office at 207.774.5721, ext. 1224www.waynflete.org
MeetingsCommunity CalendarAll ongoing calendar listings can now be found online at theforecaster.net.Send your calendar listing by e-mail to [email protected], by fax to 781-2060 or by mail to 5 Fundy Road, Falmouth, ME 04105.
Portland Wed. 4/10 5:30 p.m. Housing & Community Development THWed. 4/10 6 p.m. Police Citizen Review Sub-Committee PSThur. 4/11 CANCELLED — Board of Assessment ReviewThur. 4/11 5 p.m. Board of Harbor Commissioners S. Portland THThur. 4/11 5:30 p.m. Finance Committee Budget Reviews TH
Greater PortlandBenefitsWednesday 4/10Book sale, 11:30 a.m.-7:30 p.m., Freeport Community Library, 10 Library Drive, Freeport, 865-3307.
Thursday 4/11Book sale, 9:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m., Freeport Community Library, 10 Library Drive, Freeport, 865-3307.
Bulletin BoardThursday 4/11Careers in Aging, information-al session, 5-6 p.m., Abromson Center, 96 Falmouth St., Portland, 780-4200.
Saturday 4/13Electronics Recycling, free, 9 a.m.-1 p.m., Woodbury Campus Center, USM, 45 Bedford St., Port-land, 780-4658.
Saturday 4/20South Portland Earth Day Clean-up, 8:30 a.m., Mill Creek Park, Northeast Corner, South Portland, [email protected].
Call for VolunteersSaturday 4/13Water Quality Monitors, train-ing, 9 a.m.-2 p.m., Southern Maine Community College, 2 Fort Road,
South Portland, 799-8574.
Opportunity Alliance is looking for foster grandparent and senior companion volunteers, 15 hours a week, 55 or older, for more infor-mation call 773-0202.
OngoingActionBasedCare.org needs vol-unteers to expand organization, ABC believes in empowerment through sailing, and action-based activities to relieve depression, check website or 831-4151.
Allegiance Hospice is looking for volunteers to visit patients under hospice care in nursing homes in York and Cumberland Counties, volunteers receive formal training, Katharyn LeDoux, 877-255-4623 or [email protected].
Alzheimer’s Association, Maine Chapter, has ongoing volunteer opportunities for caring people who can offer 3-4 hours per week, 383 U.S. Route 1, Suite 2C, Scarbor-ough, 772-0115.
American Red Cross needs vol-unteers in the disaster services, health and safety and administra-tion departments, 874-1192 ext. 105.
The Cedars welcomes volunteers to help with activities and special events, including young child/par-ent and pet visits, 630 Ocean Ave., Portland, 772-5456.
Compass Project needs volun-teers with tools, carpentry or boat skills for the boat building festival and youth boat building classes,
774-0682 or [email protected].
Cumberland County Extension Association seeks people to serve on its executive committee, meets third Wednesday every month from 7-9 p.m. at Barron Center, Portland, 800-287-1471 or [email protected].
Deliver Meals on Wheels, mileage reimbursement, flexible days and weeks, one to two hours a day, FMI 800-400-6325.
Fiddlehead Center for the Arts is looking for volunteers for ongoing projects and special events, earn credits in exchange for classes, ages 16-plus, Fiddlehead Cen-ter for the Arts, 383 U.S. Route 1, Scarborough, 883-5720, fcascar-borough.org.
Freeport Community Services and Center needs people to help make a difference, FMI 865-3985.
Freeport Historical Society needs ongoing help cataloguing collections, greeter/reception-ist at Harrington house, garden helper, poster delivery assistance, administrative help, handy-person, 865-3170 or [email protected].
Friends of Feral Felines needs hardy volunteers to feed hungry cats on the Portland waterfront, 1-2 hours per month, training pro-vided, 797-3014.
Greater Portland Mentoring Partnership needs adult mentors for school-age children, 888-387-8758.
Guiding Eyes for the Blind needs volunteer puppy raisers in the Cape Elizabeth, Portland, Yarmouth, Freeport, and Bath/Brunswick areas, keep puppy from age 8 weeks-16 months, free training, support. FMI, Kathleen Hayward, [email protected], guidingeyes.org.
HART, Homeless Animal Rescue Team, a no-kill cat shelter in Cum-berland, is looking for volunteers who love cats to help in the shelter, 3-4 hours in the morning, one or two days a week, call 829-4116 or 846-3038.
Hearts and Horses Therapeutic Riding Center volunteers needed to help people with disabilities experience riding, call Vickie 929-4700, or 807-7757.
Homeless Animal Rescue Team seeks direct care volunteers, fa-cilities maintenance, fundraisers, cleaning supplies, canned cat food, 302 Range Road, Cumber-land, 829-4116 or 846-3038.
Hospice Volunteers needed for Allegiance Hospice, to visit pa-tients in nursing homes in York and Cumberland counties, Nicole Garrity, 877-255-4623 or [email protected].
ITNPortland needs volunteer drivers, help seniors and visually impaired adults enjoy indepen-dence and quality of life, commit to one or more hours per month, 854-0505.
Literacy Volunteers of Greater Portland needs volunteers for stu-dent-centered tutoring, education for non-literate adults and English as a Second Language instruction, 780-1352 for training information.
Meals on Wheels, Portland/Westbrook, needs volunteer drivers to deliver meals to home-bound elderly, once a week, once a month or more on Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays or Fridays, 10:30 a.m.–12:30 p.m., mileage reimbursement offered, call Alice or Laurie at 878-3285.
Melanoma Education Founda-tion seeking used car donations,
call Cars Helping America, 866-949-3668, skincheck.org.
Mercy Hospital in Yarmouth needs volunteers, contact Me-lissa Skahan, manager of Mission Services, 879-3286 or [email protected].
Recovery International, self-help group for nervous people, 10 a.m. Saturdays, Maine Medical Center Conference Center, 22 Bramhall St., Portland, free, all welcome, Diane, 892-9529.
Road to Recovery, American Can-cer Society needs volunteers to drive cancer patients to their doc-tors’ appointments, 800-227-2345.
TogetherGreen Volunteers need-ed for conservation projects at Scarborough Marsh, call Audubon Center at 883-5100, or [email protected].
The University of Maine Coopera-tive Extension seeks volunteers to serve on its executive committee; [email protected], 780-4205 or 800-287-1471 to request information packet.
VolunteerMaine AmeriCorps VIS-TA Projects seeks members; living allowance, health care, education award; apply online AmeriCorps.gov; Meredith Eaton 941-2800, ext. 207, [email protected].
Gardens & OutdoorsThursday 4/18Backyard chickens seminar, 6:30 p.m., Betsy Ross Community Room, 99 Preble St., South Port-land, 767-2374.
Friday 4/19Freeport Woman’s Club: “Plant Explorations in India and South Ko-rea,” 1 p.m., Freeport Community Library, 10 Library Drive, Freeport, 865-3307.
Scarborough Garden Club: “What’s New in the Garden for 2013,” 12:30 p.m., Hillcrest Com-munity Recreation Center, 108 Hillcrest Ave., Scarborough, 510-1514.
Getting Smarter Thursday 4/11Basic Computer Training I, 10 a.m.-12 p.m., Portland Public Library, 5 Monument Square, Portland, 871-1700 ext. 708, reg-istration required.
Friday 4/12The Way of the Dream, 1 p.m., Wishcamper Center, 34 Bedford St., Portland, 780-5079.
Sunday 4/14The Squalus Disaster, 6:30 p.m., Wescustogo Hall, 475 Walnut Hill Road, North Yarmouth, 846-4379.
Health and SupportMonday 4/22Caring for the Invisible Patient: How providers can advance LGBTQ Health Justice, 6 p.m., 113 Master-ton Hall, 71 Bedford St., Portland.
Tuesday 4/23Freeport Yoga Company at the
continued page 25
25April 10, 2013 Portlandwww.theforecaster.net
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Community Calendar
from previous page
Library, 10 a.m., Freeport Com-munity Library, 10 Library Drive, Freeport, 865-3307.
Kids & FamilyThursday 4/18Tony Sohns & His Travelling Bug Zoo, 1 p.m., Portland Public Library, 5 Monument Square, Portland, 871-1700 ext. 707.
OngoingFAFSA assistance available through May at the Portland Pub-lic Library, 5 Monument Square, Portland, one week’s notice and appointment required, 871-1700 ext. 772.
Resume building assistance available through May at the Port-land Public Library, 5 Monument Square, Portland, one week’s no-tice and appointment required, 871-1700 ext. 772.
Mid CoastBulletin BoardSunday 4/14Bath Antiques Show & Sale, 10 a.m.-2 p.m., Bath Middle School, 6 Old Brunswick Road, Bath, 582-5908.
Saturday 4/20Spring Flea Market & Yard Sale, 9 a.m.-2 p.m., Bath Area Senior Cen-ter, 45 Floral St., Bath, 443-4937.
Call for VolunteersSunday 4/21Keep Bath Beautiful Clean Up Day, 1 p.m., Bath City Hall, Bath, 807-1610.
OngoingAndroscoggin Home Care & Hospice has a growing need for hospice volunteers in the Bruns-wick area, training, call 777-7740, AHCH.org.
ArtVan Program seeks volunteers to help with art therapy program-ming with children and teens, promotional support and fund-
raising efforts, contact 371-4125 or visit artvanprogram.org.
Big Brothers Big Sisters seeks volunteer mentors (must be 18+) willing to commit one year and spend eight hours a month with a child 6-14 who lives in a single parent home, contact Brunswick office at 729-7736 or [email protected].
Chocolate Church Arts Center seeks volunteers for the art gal-lery and more, 798 Washington St., Bath, 442-8455.
The Greater Bath Elder Outreach Network, a program of Catholic Charities Maine, is looking for volunteers a few hours a week to assist seniors by providing companionship, transportation, assistance with errands and tele-phone reassurance for elderly and disabled people who live in Saga-dahoc County and the Brunswick area, Martha Cushing, 837-8810; meetings 6-7:30 p.m. the third Wednesday of the month, Patten Free Library, Bath, 837-8810.
Habitat for Humanity/7 Rivers Maine needs volunteers at ReStore in Bath, minimum four-hour shift commitment, 386-5081 or [email protected].
Home to Home, an organiza-tion providing a safe place for parents to exchange children for visitations, needs volunteers, com-mitment of 1-2 hours per exchange period, police check and train-ing required, Mid-Coast Hospital, Brunswick, Rich Siegel, 837-4894, mainehometohome.org.
Meals on Wheels drivers urgently needed, Wednesdays and Fridays, information, 729-0475, Spectrum Generations, 12 Main St., Topsham.
Mid Coast Hospital, dozens of positions at the café, gift shop, or greeting patients, 123 Medical Center Drive, Brunswick, 373-6015.
Mid Coast Senior Health Cen-ter needs volunteers for various activities with seniors Saturdays, Sundays and holidays, welcome desk openings, 373-3646.
Parkview Adventist Medical Cen-ter, gift shop needs volunteers, four-hour shifts mornings, after-noons and early evenings Monday through Friday, every other Sun-
day 1-4 p.m., will train, 373-4518 or visit the gift shop at 329 Maine St., Brunswick.
Pejepscot Historical Society needs volunteer tour guides for Skolfield-Whittier House and Josh-ua L. Chamberlain Museum and volunteer staff for Chamberlain Museum gift shop, 729-6606.
People Plus Center, ongoing op-portunities, 6 Noble St., Brunswick, 729-0757.
Red Cross training, Disaster Action Team, free, basic classes provide foundation for delivering assistance in emergency situa-tions, weekday evenings, course schedules at midcoast.redcross.org, register on line or call 729-6779, 563-3299, MidCoast-RedCross.net, 16 Community Way, Topsham.
Road to Recovery, American Cancer Society’s transportation program seeks volunteers to help cancer patients get to their treat-ment appointments, call Janice Staples, 373-3715, [email protected], American Cancer So-ciety, One Bowdoin Mill Island, Topsham.
Spectrum Generations has vol-unteer opportunities in program development, outreach, and re-ception at its new Community Center at 12 Main St., Topsham, Dave, 729-0475.
Sexual Assault Support Services of Mid Coast Maine needs vol-unteers to provide support and information to callers on 24-hour hotline, 725-2181.
Getting SmarterWednesday 4/10Resume and Cover Letter Work-shop, 9:30 a.m., Southern Midcoast
CareerCenter, 255 Bath Road, Brunswick, 373-4000.
Beauty and Tradition of the Birchbark Canoe, 7 p.m., Curtis Memorial Library, 23 Pleasant St., Brunswick, 666-3372.
Thursday 4/11Mathematics and the Melting Polar Ice Caps, 6 p.m., Kresge Au-ditorium, Bowdoin College, 5000 South St., Brunswick, 725-3567.
Tuesday 4/16Unveil the Mysterious Tibet Through a Candid Lens, 4 p.m., Kresge Auditorium, Bowdoin Col-lege, 5000 South St., Brunswick, 725-3046.
Wednesday 4/17Effective Job Interviewing Work-shop, 9:30 a.m., Southern Midcoast
CareerCenter, 255 Bath Road, Brunswick, 373-4000.
Farming for Clean Water, 6 p.m., Bath City Hall Auditorium, 55 Front St., Bath, 753-9400 ext. 400.
“History Through the Keyhole,“ 7:30 p.m., Kresge Auditorium, Bowdoin College, 5000 South St., Brunswick, 725-3291.
Thursday 4/18GATEways to Employment, 9 a.m., Southern Midcoast CareerCenter, 255 Bath Road, Brunswick, 373-4000.
Health & SupportTuesday 4/16Advance healthcare decision-making, 10 a.m.-12 p.m., Mid Coast Senior Health Center, 58 Baribeau
Drive, Brunswick, 373-4656.
Kids & FamilyFriday 4/19Children’s Activity: Music of the Civil War, 2 p.m., Pejebscot Historical Society, 159 Park Row, Brunswick, 729-6606.
Get ListedSubmit your listing to The Fore-caster by using our online form at theforecaster.net/eventscalendar. We need your information at least 10 days in advance of the event date for publication in our print editions. If you need assistance, send an e-mail to [email protected] or call 781-3661 ext. 115.
Don’t miss out on all our ONGOING calendar events!
Click on the Community tab at theforecaster.net for a full list of
calendar listings, including pre-scheduled monthly events,
meetings, volunteer opportunities!
April 10, 201326 Portland www.theforecaster.net
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• Decks don’t have to go on the back of the house. If the back of your house sits
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continued page 27
27April 10, 2013 Portlandwww.theforecaster.net
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wood. It’s easy to assume all decks are made of plain wood. However, decks can be made out of a wide variety of materials, natural or synthetic. Manmade materials that are a mixture of recycled plastic and wood bits or sawdust are popular because they require no main-tenance. But homeowners should know that manmade materials can get hot in the sun, which will require those enjoy-ing the deck to wear shoes.
• Expect to do some digging. If you’re
going to build your own deck, expect to do some serious digging. Local building codes will dictate how deep you will need to dig for the pier footings, which support the deck’s weight. Just how deep you’ll dig depends on your climate’s specific frost line, but it’s safe to assume you’ll get a workout in when digging.
• The deck can have multiple levels. Though many people associate decks with one level, it’s possible to have a multi-level deck if you simply don’t have enough room to build a deck that will be
Deckfrom page 26
continued page 30
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Patterns and colors and a bit of whimsy will help you set your individual mark on trend and style.
Find inspiration for your home with the latest design trends
(BPT) – Did you begin the year with an updated fitness regime? Are you pursuing new hobbies or getting better organized? Why not make a few changes to not only yourself, but also your home? By incorporating cutting-edge design trends, you’ll add color and style.
Patterns that pack a punch“No one wants a house that lacks per-
sonality,” says HGTV designer and tele-vision personality Taniya Nayak. “The easiest way to infuse your style - while being on-trend - is with an impactful pattern.” According to Nayak, there are a few prints to be on the lookout for in 2013:
• Chevron: a bold, dramatic, V-shaped pattern
• Geometrics: graphic, colorful shapes, delivering a vintage-modern look and feel
• Ombre: subtle color gradation of similar shades that’s extremely versatile
• Ikat: tribal, swirls and diamonds reminiscent of tie-dye
• Moroccan: culturally-inspired, time-less and exotic motifs
“These powerful patterns can be easily achieved with a fresh coat of paint and a premium painter’s tape, like FrogTape Multi-Surface and Delicate Surface,” adds Nayak. “Treated with PaintBlock Technology, FrogTape can be used to create these new, intricate patterns for a haute interior. And best of all, FrogTape will help deliver sharp lines, making your handiwork look like that of a pro-fessional.”
When using bold patterns, it’s best to find the right pairing of both the color and the print to not overwhelm your space. If you’re looking to use bright col-ors, incorporate the patterns onto one ac-cent wall or window treatments. If you’re using neutral hues, try using a pattern on a larger scale, around the entire room or even a piece of furniture. “You don’t want the elements of a space to fight each other,” advises Nayak. “Considering the color, scale and intensity of any pattern in relationship to the rest of your decor
will leave you with a finished space that is perfect for 2013 and beyond.”
Mixing up materials“The key to updating your home with
the latest trends is finding a balance,” says Nayak. “It’s all about making it per-sonal and adding elements that fit your lifestyle and design personality, without breaking the bank.” One great way to make a big impact on a small budget is to mix materials, creating a blend of polished and raw in a room with modern and industrial elements.
“The rustic look will be extremely popular in homes in 2013, as it’s elegant and comfortable,” adds Nayak. “It pro-vides a feeling of richness and warmth, while still being comfortable to actually live in the space.” A great material for achieving the industrial and modern look is reclaimed wood. From frames, to furniture, this aged, repurposed wood can bring richness and a dose of style to any space.
Mixing materials can also mean utiliz-ing different finishes throughout a room. In the kitchen, using contrasting materi-als makes your space look personalized. Try a mix of wood and painted finishes for a more layered and collected feel. By resisting the urge to perfectly match ev-ery piece, you’ll have a space that looks current and works nicely together.
Look for the unexpected“Just because a product is made for a
specific purpose, doesn’t mean you can’t reimagine how it could be used,” says Nayak. “For example, hanging materi-als on the wall that are typically used as flooring can be breathtaking. Wood planks or concrete panels, featured ver-tically and not just on the ground, add richness and texture.”
Another great tip to accomplishing this trend is to look at construction materi-als in new ways. Molding and paneling can add architectural detail well beyond crown molding and baseboards. Installing framing on a wall and painting it with complementary paint colors can change the look and feel of any room. “Unique treatments instantly increase the texture, depth and visual appeal, without spend-ing a lot of time or money,” says Nayak. “And the greatest feature is that these up-dates aren’t permanent, meaning you can continue to change your space as your style - and home design trends - evolve.”
Finishing touches“The key to incorporating any trend is
to make sure it accurately represents your style,” adds Nayak. “The finishing touch-es are the final way to infuse personality into your updated space.” Whether it’s utilizing accents like pillows, throws and frames in your favorite colors, or a rug that reminds you of a beloved piece of clothing, your home will truly come to life when it depicts who you are in its designs.
29April 10, 2013 Portlandwww.theforecaster.net
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Projects that might require a building permit
All too many homeowners have ex-perienced the joy of completing a home improvement project only to learn upon completion that the project is not in ad-herence with local laws. That realization, while heartbreaking, is often the result of a homeowner’s failure to secure a build-ing permit prior to starting the project. Homeowners who secure a permit before the onset of a project will know what they can and can’t do and can rest easy knowing that an approved plan complies with engineering principles and local laws.
Another disadvantage to forgoing the permit process is the potential perils such a decision cause when homeown-ers want to sell their homes. Projects completed without a permit might hurt a home’s resale value, and such projects are not often covered by homeowner’s insurance policies, meaning damage to areas of the home where an illegal project was conducted won’t be covered. While homeowners should always check with their local municipality before starting a project, it might help to know the fol-lowing are a few of the many home im-provement projects that typically require a permit before they can go forward.
• Above-ground pool• Attached storage shed• Awnings• Carports• Deck installation• Demolition project, interior or exterior• Fireplace addition• Garage conversion• Handicap ramp• Handicap restroom• In-ground pool• Patio enclosure• Patio installation• Partition wall installation• Porch• Retaining walls• Roof change (i.e., flat roof to sloped roof)• Roof replacement• Room addition• Room remodel• Siding• Sliding glass door (if area is increased)• Skylight• Spa or hot tub installation• Windows, new or replacement (if area is increased)
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[email protected]’s the time to think about building a deck
for summertime enjoyment.
Deckfrom page 27
big enough to meet all of your needs. A multi-level deck can break up those long flights of stairs while ensuring you will always have somewhere to go to escape the sun on a hot day.
• You will want to protect the deck. Decks are a costly investment, and you will want to protect that investment. If you’re building a wood deck, keep in mind the sun will beat down on the deck for most of the year. You can protect the deck by painting it. Paint provides sunscreen for the deck, stopping the sun from breaking down the material. Once
you’ve finished painting, apply sealant, whether it’s oil- or water-based.
• Don’t forget fasteners. Fasteners will hide the screws for aesthetic appeal. But not all woods and fasteners are the right fit, as certain woods are only compatible with certain fasteners. Find out which fasteners make the right fit ahead of time. Because fasteners conceal the screws, they also make it possible to go barefoot on the deck.
A deck makes a great addition to many homes, but homeowners should learn as much as possible about decks and what goes into building them before making any decking decisions.
like you and me, with the same fears and aspirations. “
One would think that Bliss has little free time to pursue other activities, along with spending good time with his wife Nancy, his two children and four grandchildren. But one would be wrong: he enjoys pastel painting, woodworking, boating, classical music and singing in his church choir.
Clearly, Bliss has discovered the secret of living a long and meaningful life. In fairness, he comes from good stock. His father Daniel, a Congregational minister who lived to be 103, wrote a memoir called “Two Worlds Apart: An Ameri-can’s Intimate Account of Growing Up in the Arab World of 1902-1923.”
His father wrote the introduction to the book in 2001, when he was 101. So don’t be surprised if Bliss’ unselfish service continues for many more years.
Unsung Herofrom page 2
without them to be honest.”Wilkerson said she hopes to have the
preschool up and running by December 2014, although the move into the new space will begin in May.
In addition to the preschool expansion, Dennis Brown, chairman of the Easter Seals Maine board, said he hopes to create a veterans assistance program that will rival the one at the organization’s parent site in New Hampshire.
“Our program will mirror the one in New Hampshire and deal with everything from pre-deployment, while soldiers are de-ployed, and when they come back,” he said.
While the program is not yet in place, the organization has already been able to help one Maine veteran.
According to Brown, the U.S. Marine was deployed to Afghanistan and injured his knee during a training operation. Dis-abled because of the injury, the Marine
came back to the country and was receiv-ing assistance at Fort Drum and through the Wounded Warrior Foundation.
After a series of occurrences lead to his benefits being shut off, he turned to Easter Seals for help.
The Marine was referred to the parent organization in New Hampshire, where he received three months of rent and Wal-Mart gift certificates so that he could get the essentials for his family.
Brown said that with guidance, the Marine was able to go through the correct channels to have his benefits reinstated.
“That is what we can do,” Brown said. “I don’t expect that Easter Seals is going to provide (veteran) services, but I am hoping we can be a conduit to provid-ing counseling and guidance on how to navigate the (Veterans Affairs) system.”
He said that funding is the major is-sue behind getting this program up and running.
The organization has a $25,000 grant for job placement services for veterans,
but Brown said that if the only service they have in place by the end of the year is job placement, he will consider that a failure.
“The big part (that needs funding) is helping people who come back pay their rent for a few months, if their roof collapses being able to help with that,” he said. “The free services are where we are going to need to get funding to help us out.”
He said a development committee is already working through how to get the funding and planning fundraisers.
A portion of Easter Seal’s Toast on the Coast wine tasting and silent auction held April 11 from 6-9 p.m. at the Ocean Gateway Terminal in Portland will go to benefit the veteran’s program. Tickets for the event are $50 for the grand tasting and $75 for a private tasting, and are available at the Easter Seals Maine website, www.eastersealsme.org.
Amber Cronin can be reached at [email protected] or 781-3661 ext. 125. Follow her on
Twitter @croninamber.
Easter Sealsfrom page 7
costs and reduce out-of-service time for vehicles.”
The city budgeted $225,000 in capital
funds for replacing the former Medcu 6, which was purchased in 2008.
While a recent audit by consultant Public Safety Solutions criticized Fire Department staffing levels, the replace-ment of department vehicles seems to be
in line with accepted standards. “This replacement schedule is com-
mensurate with industry-wide practices, especially when considering response vehicle workload assignments and the practice of moving certain ‘first line’
units ‘back’ to provide a ‘reserve’ fleet,” the consultant’s report said.William Hall can be reached at 781-3661 ext. 106 or [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter: @
hallwilliam4.
Fire Departmentfrom page 6
31April 10, 2013 Portlandwww.theforecaster.net
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Casco Bay Linesfrom page 6
the driver.Both ticketing options are being offered on a trial basis
only during the peak sailing season, which runs to October.According to a press release, the new website includes
sailing schedules; a customer feedback function; an alert section for service announcements, service updates and
schedule changes; integration with Facebook and Twitter, and compatibility with smart phones, tablet computers and other portable devices.
Online ticketing will be implemented in the near future, the service said.
Users were also advised that Internet browser bookmarks to the old Casco Bay Lines website will not work after the launch of the new site, which can be found at www.cascobaylines.com.
neither Baxter Academy officials nor Jaques will discuss it.
Jaques was ousted from his position in a surprise move in early March which officials at the school said was due to “a pattern of mismanagement.” Jaques then sued the academy over ownership of the school’s web-site and other intellectual property.
On Monday, the commission voted unanimously to move Baxter into the contract phase, which means the academy will open in the fall if it meets certain con-ditions ranging from a transportation plan to student enrollment targets.
Baxterfrom page 1
Charterfrom page 1
Budgetfrom page 1
$100 of his own money, payable when the charter agreement is signed for the school’s fall opening. He challenged others to join him and, by the end of the campaign on April 4, the project received 344 pledges totaling more than $8,000.
As a way to get his message out to other would-be Baxter students, McCammon turned to his skill with technology and created a YouTube video that was posted on the school website.
McCammon said that while he likes Scarborough High School, he chose to attend Baxter because he felt
he would have a better, technology-based education at the charter school.
His mother, Laurie, agreed and said that while Mc-Cammon is getting a good education at Scarborough, the school is not keeping up with the kids in terms of technology education.
“The example I gave the (charter) commission was that here is Chris, making these videos and having his own YouTube channel, and at Scarborough the only class they had that he could take this year was ‘Technol-ogy in the Real World’ and they were teaching him how to do searches on Google,” she said. “I knew at Baxter he would have a chance to do project-based learning, where he could explore things from his own level.”
Allison Crean Davis, vice chairwoman of the Baxter board, said the money raised by the campaign has not been earmarked for anything specific. But she said the show of support was critical in getting commission’s unanimous decision to grant the school’s charter.
“The fact that this was student-conceived, student-run and student-realized is very exciting,” Crean Davis said. “It is important for (the commission) to know the human side of it as well. I think the support is really important, to know that these students are so motivated to go to this school that they would actually do this on their own is pretty remarkable and compelling.”Amber Cronin can be reached at [email protected] or 781-3661
ext. 125. Follow her on Twitter @croninamber.
we will incorporate these new financial constraints into our multi-year budget planning so that the use of fund balance for these purposes will not be required going forward.”
The district has already absorbed a cut of nearly $1 million in its state subsidy this year because of Gov. Paul LePage’s curtailment order and will see a shift of $1.4 million in employer contributions to the teacher retirement plan, in addition to the new expenditure for charter school tuitions.
Caulk previously presented a budget to the School Board in March. The initial budget called for reduc-tions on spending for supplies, postponing some “non-essential” repairs and reducing the workforce by 41.2 full-time jobs.
The additional cut of $1.5 million would eliminate nine more staff positions; add five furlough days for non-union administrators and support staff; cut spending for athletic supplies, contracted services, food service equipment and the board contingency fund, and increase employee-paid health insurance premiums.
Budget documents show the largest portion of the School Department’s budget is labor costs, representing 69 percent of the increased costs in the proposed budget. Under the current labor agreement the average pay in-crease for fiscal 2014 is just over 5 percent for teachers, just over 4 percent for principals and nearly 5 percent for custodians, secretaries and bus drivers.
A press release from the district said Caulk originally hoped unions would help mitigate budget cuts, but the teacher’s bargaining unit, the largest of the three unions, declined to offer or negotiate any alternatives to the cur-rent contract. Unions representing principals, custodians,
secretaries and bus drivers have discussed some ideas, but agreements have not been reached.
“We remain hopeful that the unions will offer conces-sions to minimize the staff cuts and lessen the impact on our students,” Caulk said.
The full School Board was scheduled to discuss the budget at its business meeting Tuesday night. A public hearing on the municipal budget and school budget will be held April 29 at 5:30 p.m. in City Council Chambers at City Hall.Amber Cronin can be reached at [email protected] or 781-3661
ext. 125. Follow her on Twitter @croninamber.
April 10, 201332 Portland www.theforecaster.net
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Our newly renovated professionaloffices and suites offer many amenities
for only $450 per month.
We offer flexible leasing terms andaffordable monthly rates. You pay no additional
CAM or common charges.
ANIMALS
POETICGOLD FARMDog Training
Want to offer a sound educa-tion to your puppy or dog?
New classes begin at Poetic-Gold Farm in early May. Weoffer a full menu of trainingclasses featuring positive,effective methods, experiencedinstructors with diverse spe-cialties, and a beautiful state-of-the-art facility on 11 acres inFalmouth.
Sign up today [email protected] or www.poet-icgoldfarm.com.
* STAR Puppy*Puppy Agility 101* Family Dog Manners* Recall/ Come* Leash Manners*Canine Good Citizen/TherapyDog Prep* Control Unleashed*Rally Obedience* Competition Heeling* Growly Dog* Human Aggression(T.A.C.T)* Show Dog Handling* Tracking/ Noseworks
PoeticGold Farm7 Trillium LaneFalmouth, Maine 04105(207) [email protected]
RT 136N Freeport1 mile off Exit 22 I-295
The Brown Dog InnBoarding, Daycare & Spa
Lic# F1323
865-1255www.browndoginn.com
ANIMALS
In Home Pet Service & Dog Walking• Flexible Hours• Fair Rates“They’re Happier at Home!”
• Boarding• Pet Taxi
Pleasant Hill Kennels81 Pleasant Hill Road, Freeport, ME
865-4279Boarding with Love,
Care & More!
DAYCARE& GROOMING
www.pleasanthillkennels.coLic #1212
DOG TRAINING in your homeCertified Professional DogTrainer Jeff [email protected]
ANTIQUES
CUMBERLAND ANTIQUESCelebrating 28 years of TrustedCustomer Service.ABSOLUTE BEST PRICESPAID FOR MOST ANYTHINGOLD. Buying, Glass, China,Furniture, Jewelry, Silver,Coins, Watches, Toys, Dolls,Puzzles, Buttons, SewingTools, Linens, Quilts, Rugs,Trunks, Books, Magazines,Postcards, Old Photos, Paint-ings, Prints & Frames, Stereos,Records, Radios, MilitaryGuns, Fishing Tackle, & MostAnything Old. Free VerbalAppraisals.Call 838-0790.
INC
maine.rr.com
EST 2003 INC.
BOOKS WANTEDFAIR PRICES PAID
Also Buying Antiques, Art OfAll Kinds, and Collectables.G.L.Smith Books - Collectables97 Ocean St., South Portland.799-7060.
ANTIQUES
I BUY ANYTHING OLD!Books, records, furniture, jewelry,coins, hunting, fishing, military,
art work, dishes, toys, tools.I will come to you with cash.
Call John 450-2339AUTOS
PONTE’STRUCK/AUTO SERVICE
725-5997
We offer all types of service• Oil Changes • Brakes • Tires• State Inspection Commercial
• Emissions Shock • Struts • Plow Service• RV Service & Marine Work
Low Rates Come Get a 10% cardfor a whole year
FORD TAURUSFOR SALE
Sticker * 110 KGood Condition * Excellent Tires
All Service Papers
Royal Blue $1500.00Call 883-1087
Body Man on Wheels, autobody repairs. Rust work forinspections. Custom paintingand collision work. 38 yearsexperience. Damaged vehicleswanted. JUNK CAR removal,Towing. 240-2564.
2010 TOYOTA Prius HybridPrice $7200 Get in touch withme at: [email protected]
AWNINGS
Maine Bay CanvasAwnings
53 Industrial Way Portland
• Commercial• Residential• Deck Treatments• Retractable Awnings• NEW Roller Shades
Great rates - Great resultsAdvertise in
The Forecaster
BOATS
Selling your boat? Buying?Brewer Yacht Sales- Prof.YachtBrokers in South Freeport.Email: [email protected]
Tel 207-415-1004Breweryacht.com
BUSINESS SERVICES
Administrative Assistance -Bookkeeping (QuickBooks),Consulting, Desktop Publishing(Flyers, Invitations, Newslet-ters), Filing (archiving, organi-zation), Mailings, Typing, Com-puter Assistance. Call Sal-U-tions at (207)797-2617.
CARPENTRY
DRYWALL FRAMERS,HANGERS and Tapers
needed for projects in the Portland area.Experience required.
Please call Porter Drywall at 518-6515.
CHILD CARE
DONNA’S DAYCARE
FMI 415-4314
Full & Part timeSummer Care openingsw/ trips to the lakesbeaches & state parks
School Age before & afterLicensed Daycare on Cumberland/
No.Yarmouth bus route
Plenty of fun outdoor playw/snacks provided
CLEANING
Customized cleaning • LaundrySuperior serviceAffordable Prices
Eco-Friendly Products
“The Way Home Should Be”
Call 233-4829 for free estimatewww.mrsmcguires.com
Window CleaningPower Washing
Gutters CleanedCommercial and Residential
Professional, AffordableInsured
John 353-6815 or 592-6815 [email protected]
“Like” us on FacebookWeDoWindowsMaine
You’ll Clearly See, YourSatisfaction is Our Business!
LOPEZ Cleaning ServiceWe offer many differentkinds of Cleaning Services:House Cleaning, Office &Apt. & Condo, Banks &Store Cleaning. Free Esti-mates, Fully Insured, Low-est Rates.
Abel & TinaCell: 207-712-1678
CLEANING
FOR HOME/OFFICE, NEWConstruction, Real EstateClosings etc. the clean youneed is “Dream Clean” theclean you`ve always dreamedof with 15 years of expert serv-ice. Fully Insured. For rates &references call Leslie 807-2331.
TABATHA’S SPARKLINGHOMEORGANIZING
Call Rebecca 838-3049
Wedo homecleaning andorganizing
We Have OpeningsFREE ESTIMATES • Shirley Smith
Call 233-4191Weekly- Bi-Weekly
WINDOWCLEANINGby Master’s Touch
846-5315Serving over 25 years
CLEANING
HOME CLEANINGReliable, quality work, reason-able rates. Excellent refer-ences. Contact Marina at 773-8648 for a free estimate.
MAGGIE’S Cleaning & HomeCare covering all areas. Rea-sonable Rates, Great Refer-ences. Mature, experiencedwoman. 522-4701.
COMPUTERS
Certified in PC Board Repair / Inspection / ReworkAll Levels of Hardware Repair Can Be Performed
Disaster Recovery • Spyware – VirusWiFi Networks • Data Recovery
30 YEARS EXPERIENCE
A+ Network+ CertifiedComputer Repair
PC – Mac – TabletsMember of Sebago Lake Chamber of Commerce and BBB since 2003
SENIORS AREESPECIALLY WELCOME
Dave: 892-2382
All Major Credit Cards Accepted
PC LIGHTHOUSE
April 10, 201334 Portland www.theforecaster.net
Classifieds781-3661fax 781-2060
Place your ad onlinetheforecaster.net
2
We invite you to experiencethe Inn by the Sea,
where luxury comes naturally.
INN BY THE SEA ANNUAL JOB FAIR
Please join us at the Inn by the Sea40 Bowery Beach Road,
Cape Elizabeth, ME 04107
Wednesday April 10th • 6pm to 8pmSaturday April 20th • 10am to 2pm
THE INN IS LOOKING FOR QUALIFIEDEMPLOYEES IN THE FOLLOWING AREAS:
• Reservations• Valet• Guest Services• Bellmen• Restaurant• Lounge
• Banquets• Kitchen• Housekeeping• Spa• MaintenanceGrounds
WE INVITEYOU TO BE APART OF OUR
TEAM!
Contact: Inn by the SeaTel: (207) 799-3134Fax: (207) 799-4779
Email:[email protected]
w w w . i n n b y t h e s e a . c o m
HHoommee II nnssppeecc tt ii oonnCCoouurrsseeThe Home Inspection Service is one of the fastestgrowing aspects of the real estate business. Prepare toprovide home inspection services as a “RegisteredHome Inspector” by completing this 40-hour coursedesigned to put you into the home inspection businesswithin days of graduation.
Perfect home-based business for anyone with knowledge of residential construction
Classes Start November 9, 2012 in WestbrookThe Arthur Gary School of Real Estate has successfully offered
Home Inspection courses for over 15 years.
Please call 207-856-1712 or visit our website.
www.ArthurGar y.com
Classes Start May 10, 2013 inWestbrook
Appraisal LicenseCoursesDon’t wait!
Approved!for Maine
and NewHampshir
e
Start a new career inReal Estate Appraising.Classes starting April 25th inWestbrook, ME
For more information call the Arthur Gary School of Real Estate at 207-856-1712or check out our website www.ArthurGary.com
Harry C. Crooker & Sons Inc. of Topsham,Maine has an immediate openings for:
Experienced GraderOperatorApplicants proficient in the use of GPS andgrade / slope automation preferred. Salarynegotiable, dependent upon experience.
Experienced PavingEstimator / Project Manager
Paving PersonnelAll positions.
Apply by e-mail to [email protected] or inperson Monday–Friday at 103 Lewiston Rd.,Topsham, Maine. We are located on Rt. 196,across from the Topsham Fair Mall.
Harry C. Crooker & Sons is an Affirmative Action / Equal opportunityEmployer. Women and minorities are encouraged to apply.
We Offer:
• Competitivewages
• Paidholidays& vacation
• Grouphealth, lifeanddisabilityinsurance
• Profitsharing
• 401(k)savingsplan
At Harry C. Crooker & Sons, Inc., we believe that ouremployees are our greatest asset. That is why we arealways looking for motivated and reliable people. Ifyou are responsible, enjoy working with others, andpossess good work habits, then we are looking for you.
Asphalt PlantOperator
HighwayConstruction/SiteWork PersonnelAll Positions
Paving PersonnelAll Positions
Apply by e-mail to [email protected] or in
COMPUTERS
NEED COMPUTER HELP?• We Come To You• Problems Fixed/Repaired• “How To” Tutorial Lessons
• SENIORS Our Specialty• Reasonable Rates• References Available• Facebook Help
Friendly Tech Services207-749-4930
ELDER CARE
Are you interested inmaking a difference in an
older person’s life?Opportunities available for
individuals interested in rewardingwork providing one on one care
for elders in our community.Responsibilities include non-
medical and light personal care.For more info and an application,
please go to our website atwww.homepartnersllc.com
HomePartners883-0095
Opportunities available forindividuals interested in
rewarding work providing oneon one care for elders in ourcommunity. Responsibilities
include non-medical andlight personal care. Weekendavailability a plus. For more
info and an application,please go to our website atwww.homepartnersllc.com
CNA LOOKING for privateduty home care. Honest,reli-able and compassionate. I canhelp with errands, personalca re ,housekeep ing ,mea lprep.Call Tracy@595-8039
FIREWOOD
$220
Kiln-dried Firewood$340
Green Firewood
$220(mixed hardwood)
*Celebrating 27 years in business*
Cut/Split/DeliveredQuality Hardwood
State Certified Trucks for Guaranteed MeasureA+ Rating with the Better Business Bureau$220 Green $275 Seasoned
$330 Kiln DriedAdditional fees may apply
Visa/MC accepted • Wood stacking available353-4043
www.reedsfirewood.com
Cut • Split • Delivered$215.00/CORD GREENGUARANTEED MEASURE
CALL US FOR TREE REMOVEL/PRUNING
FIREW D
891-8249 Accepting
YANKEE YARDWORKS
FOR SALE
XBOX-Refurbished Original-ly paid $119 for just the XBOX,and have added 6 DVD’s, TigerWoods PGA Tour 2003 & 2006,Madden 2004, Real WorldGolf, Call of Duty, NascarThunder 2002. A bargain price.Great condition. $100. Pleasecall 653-5149.
G reat ra tes - G rea t resu ltsA dver tise in
The Forecaste r
BOWFLEX MOTIVATORWorkout Machine. Great con-dition. Can see pictures onCraigslist under SportingGoods by owner. NEWPRICE $250. Freeport. Get fitfor the new year! Need theroom. Call Cathy 653-5149,leave message.
Books For Sale, 1,100 paper-back and hard cover books.Stephen King/Danielle SteeleJames Patterson/Nora RobertsJohn Grisham, and muchmore. Call Bert 216-3460.
FUELS
OIL FURNACE CLEANING24 HOUR SERVICE207-632-6320
Please take a moment to say: “I saw your ad in The Forecaster”
35April 10, 2013 Portlandwww.theforecaster.net
Classifieds781-3661fax 781-2060
Place your ad onlinetheforecaster.net
3
Auburn • Westbrook • Bangor
Classes StartingMay in
Westbrook
KIND-HEARTEDBegin a rewarding career as a Comfort Keeper. Responsibilitiesinclude personal care, meal preparation, companionship, andlight housekeeping. Flexible full-time or part-time hours areavailable.
Earned benefits include:
• Dental and Vision Plan • AAAMembership
• Paid Sick Leave • Year-End Bonus
Experience is always helpful, but not necessary. Our excellenttraining program helps all our caregivers become skilledprofessionals.
Please call to find out more!
152 US Route 1, Scarborough www.comfortkeepers.com
885 – 9600
is hiring for a:Career Counselor/Employment Specialist
P1313This is a full-time, 12 month position.
For specific information and application procedures go to:http://hr.umf.maine.edu/employment-opportunities/professional
AAO/EEO employer
ARCA
DIAHO
MECA
RE
NOW HIRING!
RN & PSS
Portland 207.883.6010
HOME CARE NEEDED!]
EOE
COME JOIN OUR COMMUNITY CARE TEAM (CCT) in the Waterville/Fairfield/Pittsfield areas!
Apply online atwww.easternmainehomecare.org
Qualified applicants should submit a cover letter and provide a relevantresume with three references with names and addresses.
Bonnie Turck, HR, Director, Eastern Maine HomeCare,14 Access Highway, Caribou, ME 04736Tel (207) 498-2578 * Fax (207) 498-4129
E-mail: [email protected]
Licensed Clinical SocialWorkerFull-Time
LMSW-CC or LCSWTeam LeaderThis employee must have both administrative and direct client serviceduties in the expanding CCT program. Administrative duties will compriseapproximately 30-40% of effort and includes working with the CCTCoordinator to supervise the CCT expansion and operation. Direct serviceprovision includes mental health treatment as part of an integrated,multidisciplinary team to help people make necessary changes to improvetheir health and access available health/social resources. Work requiressome travel, home visits, and direct contact with patients, their medicalproviders, families, and community supports, data collection/analysis, andsupervision of assigned staff. Supervisory experience in a medical settingis preferred.The LMSW-CC/LCSW must have Master’s Degree in Social Work and a minimumof 3 year’s of experience in the area of social work, counseling and rehab,supervisory experience and must also have a current Maine LCSW license.
Registered NursePart-Time
This employee will provide in home health assessments and healtheducation as part of an integrated, multidisciplinary team to help peoplemake necessary changes to improve their health and access availablehealth/social resources. Work requires some travel, home visits, and directcontact with patients, their medical providers, families, and communitysupports. One year of experience in a home health setting is preferredand a current Maine RN license. Must have the ability to observe,assess, plan, implement and evaluate individuals and families strengthsand needs as they relate to impaired health and their medical conditions;must also possess the ability to work independently and maintain strictconfidentiality.
FURNITURERESTORATION
DON’T BUY NEW, RENEW!REPAIR & REFINISHINGStripping w/no dipping. Myshop or on site. PICKUP &DELIVERY PROVIDED by For-mer high school shop teacherwith references. 32 yearsexperience.
QUICK TURN AROUND! 371-2449
FURNITURE
Cost $6500. Sell for $1595.
207-878-0999
Maple Gla
ze
KITCHEN
CABINETSNever
Installed
BEDROOM SET, needle-point side chair, colonial“secretary” desk and more.Prices negotiable. Must see.798-4074
HEALTH
Alcoholics Anonymous Fal-mouth Group Meeting TuesdayNight, St. Mary`s EpiscopalChurch, Route 88, Falmouth,Maine. 7:00-8:00 PM.
HELP WANTED
Apply online athttp://www.mercyhospitalstories.org/
cms/careers/or call 400-8763
We are a thriving programproviding in-home supportto older adults. Our per diem
Companions offer socialization,light personal care and end of lifecare. We see skills and experiencebut are willing to train. If you arecompassionate, mature and a
helper by nature call LifeStages.All shifts available, particular need
for evenings and week-ends.Competitive wages.
Buck’s Naked BBQ- Freeportseeking qualified, experiencedline cooks. Responsible, hard-working team players. Positivework environment with greatpotential for growth. Pay isdetermined on experience.Benefits are available. Drop offresume- apply in person. 568US Route One.
HELP WANTED
WORK WITH HORSES: Cen-tral Maine private stable seeksgroom as well as generalduties on small acreage. Reli-able, responsible, cheerful,mature, horse experience.team player. Benefits, work-man’s comp, competitivewages. Full or part time option,will include weekends. Mailresume with references to10835 Oak Bend Way, Welling-ton, FL 33414.
HELP WANTED
COUNTRY PRIDECLEANING SERVICE, INC.
Cleaning Help NeededPart time evenings, weekends
in New GloucesterCall 1-800-974-7019
HELP WANTED
EXPERIENCED CERTIFIEDCRMA to join our team at our7-bed Assisted Living Facili-ty located on ChebeagueIsland ME. Competitive payand benefits. Call Amy Rich846-5610 or visit our websitewww. is landcommonsre-soucecenter.org.
HELP WANTED
Coastal Manor in Yarmouth, a39 bed longterm care facilityhas positions available. RNpart-time position 3-11 withoccasional 11-7 shifts. CNA fulltime 11p-7a position and perdiem hours on weekends allshifts. 846-2250 for more info.
CASTING CALL for Docu-mentary Film in Portland, ME.To Apply:orchardrevolution.com
HELP WANTED
Seeking part time caregiverfor elderly woman
Experience and certificationpreferred, references required
Call Monday-Fridaybetween 2-5pm
781-9074
ELDER CARE
April 10, 201336 Portland www.theforecaster.net
Classifieds781-3661fax 781-2060
Place your ad onlinetheforecaster.net
4
Caring and Experienced♦
Call Laura today at699-2570 to learn about arewarding position with our company.
550 Forest Avenue, Suite 206, Portland, ME 04101www.advantagehomecaremaine.com
Advantage Home Care is looking for caring and experiencedcaregivers to provide in-home non-medical care for
seniors in the greater Portland, Maine. If you possess aPSS or CNAcertificate, have worked with clients with dementiaor have provided care for a loved one in the past, we wouldlike to talk with you about joining our team. We have part-timeand full-time shifts available weekdays, nights and weekends.
We offer competitive wages; ongoing training and support;dental insurance; supplemental medical benefits and a
401k plan with employer match.
BEST OF THE BEST
Do you want to leave work knowing you’ve made a real difference insomeone’s life? Are you the kind of dependable person who won’t let a perfectsummer day (or a winter blizzard) keep you from work? Are you trustworthyenough to become part of someone’s family? We’re looking for natural bornCAREGivers: women and men with the heart and mind to change an elder’slife. Call us today to inquire about joining the greatest team of non-medicalin-home CAREGivers anywhere! Flexible part-time day, evening, overnight,weekday and weekend hours.
Call Home Instead Senior Careat 839-0441 or visit
www.homeinstead.com
HOME INSTEAD SENIOR CARE IS LOOKINGFOR THE BEST OF THE BEST.
EDITORAward winning weekly in western Maine seeksexperienced, tenacious editor willing to bring thepaper even further. The newspaper has won state,regional and national awards for its communityand investigative journalism. The candidate mustbe willing to be active in the community as wellas help staff grow into their potential. Should beexperienced in small town journalism and be ahands-on leader who understands the importanceof community journalism. Candidates for thiseditor’s position must possess strong writing,editing, photography and social media skills.
Cover letter and resume to:[email protected]
Sun Journal is a division of the Sun Media Group
Do you have administrative experience with an interest in sales?Do you enjoy the freedom of creating your own ideas, while also
maintaining existing special projects and supporting a dynamic team?The Sun Journal in Lewiston might be just what you are looking for!
Candidate must have administrative experience, aninterest in sales, a dependable vehicle, a clean drivingrecord, strong customer service, communication, timemanagement & problem solving skills. Must be anindependent thinker, a self starter and possess the skillsto work functionally within a team environment.
Principal responsibilities include:• Maintain and grow existing advertising revenue in Printand On-line
• Sell Special Project advertising• Provide coverage and support for Account Executives• Sales development & new ideas• Reporting, billing, collections & record keeping• Coordinate Ad creation & Ad proofing• Organize Media Packages
This is an exciting opportunity for an experienced salesperson to work for a dynamic team with an excellentbenefits package and compensation. Please forward acover letter and resume to the address listed below.
Sun JournalAttn: Human ResourcesPO Box 4400Lewiston, Me 04243-4400
Advertising SalesAssociateWaterfront Manager
Sebasco Harbor Resort is looking for anexperienced Captain to operate our tour boat RUTHand to manage our busy waterfront. Must havehave a valid USCG Masters License, extensiveexperience with both sail and powered vessels,prior supervisory experience and be available fromMay 1st – mid-October. Resume and applicationrequired.
Obtain an application or apply online at:www.sebasco.com
Sebasco Harbor Resort29 Kenyon Road, PO Box 75Sebasco Estates, ME 04565
Fax 389-2316Email: [email protected]
Where is the BEST local advertising deal, dollar for dollar?The Forecaster!
Bowdoin College’s Children’s Center, a NAEYC-accredited center providing care to children
infant – preschool, has the followingpositions available:
Co-Lead Infant Caregiver & Co-Lead Preschool Caregiver:Planning and implementing curriculum and activities, maintaining
daily schedules, and supervising Caregivers and subs.
Infant Caregiver &Younger Toddler Caregiver: Assisting withprogram operations and curriculum management, and a safe, healthy,
caring, and enriched environment.
Substitute Caregivers: Assisting in the day-to-day functions of theChildren’s Center on an on-call, as-needed basis.
For further details, job requirements, and to apply, please visithttps://careers.bowdoin.edu and complete an online application forthe position. Paper or emailed applications will not be accepted.
Bowdoin College is committed to equality and is an equal opportunity employer.
Bowdoin College
HELP WANTED
Stump and Grind StumpChipping Service in NorthYarmouth(www.stumpand-grind.net ) is looking for a reli-able, self-motivated equipmentoperator with a clean drivingrecord, who enjoys outdoor,physical work. Basic electron-ic, hydraulic, and mechanicalskills and history of workingindependently a plus. Part-timefrom now until November.Send resume [email protected]
Restaurant workers wantedBonos Pizzeria and Grille,opening soon is looking forservers, hosts, bussers anddishwashers at our store @ 29Western Ave, South Portland(Formerly Ricetta’s.) Pleasecome by and apply if you arepersonable, friendly, and com-mitted to excellence. We are anequal opportunity employer. Ifyou won’t pass a backgroundor drug test, do not apply.
RECEPTIONIST NEEDED fora busy dental practice. A “cando” attitude, excellent commu-nication skills, and dental expe-rience are desired. Exception-al customer service skills, abili-ty to maintain multiple sched-ules, multi-task and prioritizingare essential. FAX207.798.6701 or [email protected]
HOME REPAIR
Designed to enhance your home & lifestyleInterior & ExteriorRestoration & Remodeling
Custom Stairwork & AlterationsFireplace Mantles & Bookcase Cabinetry
Kitchens & Bathrooms
All manner of exterior repairs & alterations
207-797-3322
Brian L. PrattCarpentry
HOME REPAIR
Seth M. RichardsInterior & Exterior Painting & Carpentry• Small Remodeling Projects • Sheetrock
Repair • Quality Exterior & Interior PaintingGreen Products Available
FULLY INSURED – FREE ESTIMATES
Call SETH • 207-491-1517
Dr.DrywallQuality workmanshipat Affordable Prices
207-219-2480
846-5802PaulVKeating.com
• Painting• Weatherization• Cabinets
CARPENTRY
799-5828
Residential & CommercialGenerators-Kohler • Honda
All calls returned!
BOWDLER ELECTRIC INC.
Chimney Lining & MasonryBuilding – Repointing – Repairs
Asphalt & Metal RoofingFoundation Repair & Waterproofing
Painting & Gutters20 yrs. experience – local references
(207) 608-1511www.mainechimneyrepair.com
PROFESSIONALFLOORING INSTALLER
All major brands,Hardwood, Laminate,Ceramic Tile, Linoleum,Carpet etc.
Hardwood Refinishing Labor on your material available also25 years + experience • Free Estimates
Call Chris 831-0228
Sales & ServiceAll major brands,
Hardwood, Laminate,Ceramic Tile, Linoleum, Carpet etc.
JOHNSON’STILING
Custom Tile design available
Floors • ShowersBacksplashes • Mosaics
829-9959ReferencesInsured
FreeEstimates
FLOORINGINSTALLER
Call Bill 831-2325
30+ yearsNo Job to Big or Small
Carpet, Ceramic, Hardwood,Laminate, VCT no problem
EXPERT DRYWALL SER-VICE- Hanging, Taping, Plaster& Repairs. Archways, Cathe-drals, Textured Ceilings, Paint.Fully Insured. ReasonableRates. Marc. 590-7303.
GENERATORINSTALLATIONS
LAMP REPAIRS
since 1986773 - 3400
theforecaster.net
Waterfront ManagerSebasco Harbor Resort is looking for an experienced Captain to operate our tour boat RUTH and to manage our busy waterfront. Must have have a valid USCG Masters License, extensive experience with both sail and powered vessels, prior supervisory experience and be available from May 1st – mid-October. Resume and application required.
Obtain an application or apply online at: www.sebasco.com
Sebasco Harbor Resort29 Kenyon Road, PO Box 75 Sebasco Estates, ME 04565Email: [email protected]
37April 10, 2013 Portlandwww.theforecaster.net
Classifieds781-3661fax 781-2060
Place your ad onlinetheforecaster.net
5
SUCCESS STARTS HERE
For more information about graduation rates, the median debt of students who completed the program and other important information visitwww.intercoast.edu. Not all programs are available at all locations. Please call for more information. Financial aid is available to those who qualify.
Call your nearest location to schedule a career planning session:InterCoast, Kittery275 US Route 1,
Kittery, ME 03904
InterCoast Portland Maine Campus207 Gannett Drive S.
Portland, Maine 04106
InterCoast Salem, New Hampshire19 Keewaydin DriveSalem, NH 03079
√ FINANCIAL AID AVAILABLE(to those who qualify)
√ Job Placement Assistance
ALCOHOL & DRUG COUNSELING STUDIES
ASSOCIATES IN APPLIED SCIENCESSUBSTANCE ABUSE COUNSELINGGIVE OTHERS HOPE. BECOME A SUBSTANCEABUSE COUNSELOR!
PRACTICAL NURSING PROGRAM *LOCATED IN MAINE
PHARMACY TECHNICIANMEDICAL ASSISTANT
BUSINESS TECHNOLOGY & ADMINISTRATION(ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT, SECRETARY, HR)
COMPUTERIZED ACCOUNTING (BOOKKEEPING)
ELECTRICAL TRAINING PROGRAMHVAC TECHNICIAN
CAREER TRAINING AT INTERCOAST
ClassesFormingNow
OnlineProgramsAvailable (888) 341-1616(888) 449-8383
INTERCOAST.EDUvisit:
Four Season Services
CertifiedWall andPaver InstallersCALLFOR ACONSULTATION
829.4335www.evergreencomaine.com
NOWSCHEDULING:•Mulching
• Lawn Mowing
• Spring Cleanups
•Mulch Delivery
• Landscape Renovations
• Paver Walkways, Steps,Patios, Driveways
•RetainingWalls
•Drainage Solutions
•Granite Steps & Posts
• Lawn Care/Installation • Fencing • Rototilling• Mulch/Loam/Gravel Deliveries • Tractor Work
• Landscape Design/Installation • Tree Removals/Pruning• Driveway Sealing/Sweeping • Spring/Fall Clean-ups
• Reasonable Prices• Free Estimates • Insured
Dan Bowie Cell:207-891-8249
207-353-8818 [email protected]
Yankee Yardworks
Durham
You name it, we’ll do it!Residential / Commercial
• Storm Cleanups • Lawn Care/Installation • Fencing• Rototilling • Mulch/Loam/Gravel Deliveries • Tractor Work• Landscape Design/Installation • Tree Removals/Pruning
• Driveway Sealing/Sweeping • Spring/Fall Clean-ups
HOME REPAIR
CARPENTER/BUILDER
Roofing Vinyl / Siding / Drywall / PaintingHome Repairs / Historical Restoration
25years
experienceFullyInsured
ContraCting, sub-ContraCting,all phases of ConstruCtion
Call 329-7620 for FREE estimates
GET IT DONE!Maintenance, Yard Work &Plowing. Portland & Westbrook
References, Insured.Call James 207-420-6027.
LANDSCAPINGCONTRACTORS
SERVICES• Leaf and Brush Removal• Bed Edging and Weeding• Tree Pruning/Hedge Clipping• Mulching• Lawn Mowing• Powersweeping
Call or E-mail forFree Estimate(207) 926-5296
We specialize in residential andcommercial property maintenanceand pride ourselves on our customerservice and 1-on-1 interaction.
D. P. GAGNONLAWN CARE & LANDSCAPING
LANDSCAPINGCONTRACTORS
Residential & CommercialPROPERTY MANAGEMENT• Mowing• Walkways & Patios• Retaining Walls• Shrub Planting & Pruning• Maintenance Contracts• Loam/Mulch Deliveries
email: [email protected]
Stephen Goodwin, Owner(207) 415-8791
LAWN AND GARDEN
Peter Niklaus: 207-781-5516 [email protected]
A Falmouth-based, experienced, student enterprise.
• Spring Clean Up• Odd Jobs
Call today for a free Quote!
Pete’s Yard Care▲▲▲▲▲▲▲▲▲▲
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ReferencesAvailable
4 Years ofExperience
LAWN AND GARDEN
Lawn Care: Mowing • AeratingDethatching • Renovations
Landscape: Maintenance,Loam/Mulch •Year Round Clean-ups
Planting • Snow Removal
Quality always comes first
Aaron Amirault, Owner(207) 318-1076
ALL SEASONSYard Care
1/2 off Spring clean ups withsummer mowing service.M o w i n g , m u l c h i n g ,g a r d e n / b e dmaintaining,hedge/ tree ,pruning, general yard care.329-2575 free estimatesallseasonsyardcareme.com
LAWN CARE & LANDSCAPE SERVICES
207-712-1678
Looking To ServeMore Customers This Season.Free Estimates • Lower Rates
LOPEZ
Serving Cape Elizabeth, South Portland,Portland, Westbrook, Scarborough,Falmouth, Cumberland & Yarmouth.
WANT YOUR LAWN to lookprofessionally managed?Call a professional!Free spring clean-Up withlawn contract.Call 332-4370Insured and particular.
LAWN AND GARDEN
Contact Sam at
Mayhew Miscellaneousfor all of your spring andsummer cleanup needs
(landscape, mowing, tree-workand debris removal)
804-994-3212 (Freeport)
Summer is right around the corner!
NUTRA-MULCH YOUR gar-dens! Enhance your gardenswith compost and mulch inone. Residential delivery at$45 per yard plus deliverycost. Call for delivery 252-9525
A BETTER GARDEN!ROTOT I L L I N G - G a r d e n s ,lawns. Reasonable rates. Largeor small gardens. Experienced.Prompt service. Call 829-6189or 749-1378.
MASONRY
MARK ABOURJAILY’SStone Construction andMasonry. Build, Maintain,Restore Stone Walls, Patios,Walkways and Masonry.FREE Estimates and FullyInsured.I am involved in every projectfrom start to finish am com-mitted to giving my best andalways bring a passion forbuilding with stone. Call oremail me for a free quote:[email protected] out my website at:mainestonemasonry.com
April 10, 201338 Portland www.theforecaster.net
Classifieds781-3661fax 781-2060
Place your ad onlinetheforecaster.net
6
We haul anything to the dump.Basements and Attic Clean-Outs
Guaranteed best price and service.
INSURED
DUMP GUY
Call 450-5858 www.thedumpguy.com
J. Korpaczewski & SonAsphalt Inc.
• Driveways• Walkways• Roadways• Parking Lots• Repair Work• RecycledAsphalt/Gravel
FAMILYOWNED &OPERATED www.mainelypaving.com
“Making Life Smoother!”“Your Full Service Paver”
N� P�ymen� Un��l We’re D�ne100% SatiSfactioN • fREE EStiMatES
Licensed-Bonded • Fully Insured
282-9990
MASONRY
ALL YOURMASONRYNEEDSOver
40 yearsexperienceCall 210-3444
Great rates - Great resultsAdvertise in
The Forecaster
MOVING
BIG JOHN’S MOVINGResident ia l /Commercia lHouseholds Small And Large
Office Relocations Packing ServicesCleaning ServicesPiano MovingSingle Item Relocation
Rental Trucks loaded/unloadedOPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
828-8699We handle House-to-Houserelocations with Closingsinvolved. No extra charge forweekend, gas mileage orweight. Happy Holidays!
PAINTING
JIM’S HANDY SERVICES,DUMP RUNS. COMMERCIAL-RESIDENTIAL. INTERIOR-EXTERIOR PAINTING/ CAR-PENTRY/DECKS/FLOORS/WALLS/DRYWALL/MASON-R Y / P R E S S U R EWASHING/TREEWORK/ODDJOBS. INS/REF/FREE EST./24 YRS. EXP. 207-239-4294OR 207-775-2549.
PAINTING
Exterior/InteriorGreater Portland Area20+ years expAlso cleaning out basements, garages,attics & barnsWilling to possibly trade part of or all services forcertain antiques/old items. References Insured
Call Joe (207) 653-4048
Hall PaintingInterior/ExteriorFamily owned andoperated for over 20 yearsFree and timely estimates
Specializing in Older Homes
Call Brett Hall at 671-1463
Violette Interiors: Painting,tiling, wallpaper removal,wall repairs, murals andsmall exterior jobs. Highestquality at affordable rates. 26years experience. Free esti-mates. Call Deni Violette at831-4135.
REAL ESTATE
PRIVATE PARTY SEEKING toPurchase a Camp, Cottage orSeasonal Home, Liveable orrepairable on a lake or pondwithin 1 hour Portland payingcash. All replies kept strictlyconfidential. Call 207-650-7297.
REAL ESTATEWANTED
Responsible, retired womanseeking 1-2 bedroom apart-ment/home. Prefer quiet loca-tion with yard. Excellent refer-ences. 699-9250.
RENTALS
SUGARLOAF WINTER SEA-SONAL rental 2013-2014.6 month, Nov.1st-May1st.Birchwood #3. 3 bedroom, 2bath. First floor. Fabulous loca-tion. Ski to mid-station. Justabove fitness center. Long tilehallway to store gear. Propaneheat & lots of storage. Utilitiesnot included. NP, NS.$ 1 6 , 5 0 0 / s e a s o n [email protected]
YARMOUTH VILLAGE- large2 bedroom apt. 2nd floor. Offstreet parking, W/D hookupavail. Heat/Water included.Walk to Main St/Royal RiverPark. $1,000/month. NP/NS.References/Security Depositrequired. Call 846-6240 or 233-8964.
OLD ORCHARD BEACH- 1bedroom apartment. Clean,Modern. Heat, hot water, park-ing, laundry, new hardwood .No dogs. $775/month. 508-954-0376.
GRAY- CABIN FOR RENTFurnished. No pets. All utilities,cable, wireless internet.$175.00/week. 657-4844.
ROOFING/SIDING
Affordable Roofing & SidingWe’ll match or beat any rea-sonable bid by 6%. Labor only.We’ll help you bring your homeinto the 21st century by addingarchitectural beauty and valueto your home. Fully Insured.Free estimates. Call Roland orTim. 207-240-6505.
SERVICES OFFERED
Attic • Basement • GarageCleanouts • Demolition
Residential & CommercialWe Recycle & Salvageso you save money!
NEED JUNK REMOVEDCALLTHE
DUMPMAN
We will buysaleable salvage goods
Furniture/Doors/Windows/etc.
Guaranteed
Best Price
828-8699
ALL METAL HAULED FREEWashers/Stoves etc.
Removal of oil tanks
SERVICES OFFERED
Pools, Privacy, Children,Pets, Decorative
Cedar Chain link,Aluminum, PVC
ANY STYLE FROM ANY SUPPLIER20+ years experience
FENCESINSTALLED
Call D. Roy + Son Fencing
CZ PLUMBING LLC. OF MAINEServing Southern MainePlumbing & Heating
Well Pumps & Tanks, FiltrationKitchen, Bath, RemodelsSump, Sewage Pumps
Water Heaters, Disposals, Fixtures & FaucetsWinterization, Drain Cleaning
40YEARS EXPERIENCE AT AFFORDABLE RATESLICENSED & INSURED
CALLTODAY 207-865-0499
Building Maintenance, LightTrucking, Roofing, Siding,Chimney Repair, Painting,Dump Runs, Moving Antiques,Valuables. 20 years experi-ence. Call Mark at 346-0120 orFrank 653-6218.
TENT RENTALS
Maine BayCanvas
53 Industrial Way Portland
• Tent Rentals• Wedding receptions• Corporate Events• Tent Sales• Lawn Parties• Sporting Events
TREE SERVICES
FullyLicensed
AndInsured
www.southernmainetree.com207-632-4254
FreeEstimates
Justin CrossFCL2731
Experienced x Safe x AffordableStump Grinding Services
• Planned Removal• Crane Work
• Pruning• Storm Damage
24 Hour Emergency Services
FOWLER TREE CARE:Licensed Arborist & MasterApplicator, fully insured. Largetree pruning, ornamental tree,shrub pruning, spraying, deeproot fertilizing, hedges, difficulttree removal, cabling. Free esti-mates. Many references. 829-5471.
TREE SERVICES
McCarthyTreeServiceSPRING SPECIALS• Fully Insured• Climbing• Difficult Take-downs
Low Rates Fast Service
232-9828
Serving Greater Portland &24 hr. Emergency Service
Member of BUY LOCAL
Stump & Grind. Experts instump removal. 15 years inbusiness. Best prices and serv-ice. Satisfaction guaranteed.Free estimates. Fully insured.Call 846-6338, or emailg r i n d . s t u m p @ g m a i l . c o mwww.stumpandgrind.net
• Climbing• Limbing• Difficulttake-downs
• Fully insured • Free estimates• Many references
829-6797
REE SERVICEJIM’S• Removals• Chipping• Lots cleared& thinned
VACATION RENTALS
SCENIC TUSCANY- Charm-ing 1 bedroom apartmentequipped, old world patio,backyard, great views. Historichillside village, ocean and Flo-rence close by. $725.00 week-ly. 207-767-3915.
WANTED
WWI & WWIIGerman
Military items
Wanted: New and Used furni-ture, glassware, collectibles,antiques, baby furniture,clothes and much more. CallDottie 207-773-6668
Newspapers were used toplan purchases more thanany other media at 52%.– Online (net of 7 sources) 48%– Product display in store 21%– Direct mail 17%– Television 16%
2011 How America Shops and Spends Newspaper Association of America.Your hometown newspaper since 1986 and always locally owned
Help starts here.
Dial 2-1-1 to be connected with atrained and friendly specialist ready to help.
Brought to you by theUnited Ways of Maine
Or search online at: www.211maine.org
FREE & CONFIDENTIAL
Are you unsure of how to find services tohelp a family member, a friend, or yourself?
39April 10, 2013 Portlandwww.theforecaster.net
• land•homes• rentals• commercial• summerproperty
Lowest Mortgage Rates at:firstportland.com
878-7770 or 1-800-370-5222
Earle W. Noyes & SonsMoving Specialists, Inc.
Over 20,000 Moves, with a 99%“Willing to Recommend” Customer Rating
www.NoyesMoving.com
DAVE SAWYEREach office is independently
owned and operated
Office: (207) 846-4300
Contact Dave: Ext. 108
Cell: (207) 653-7242Email: [email protected]
www.rheritage.com
Rob WilliamsReal Estate
Bailey Island, ME 04003 207-833-5078baileyisland.com
WatERfRont
ORR’S ISLAND WATERFRONT - Classic, shingle style cottage,with open ocean views easterly exposed water frontage.Waterview sunporch, fireplace, covered porch, rustic interior.Spectacular sunrises. Nicely set back from the road. Short walkto Bailey Island. $459,900
KIRT BELLphone 207-775-6105cell 207-650-5057fax [email protected]@bellhomemortgage.net24 Christopher Toppi DriveSouth Portland, ME 04106
NMLSLO#161400NMLSID#1760,MELicense#SLB7949
This isnota commitment to lend.Availabilitydependentuponapprovedcredit anddocumentationlevel, acceptable appraisal, andmarket conditions.
HISTORICALLYLOW RATES!
Build or Buy your Dream Homethis Spring and take advantage ofsome of the Lowest Rates Ever!
Some of our special products available:• Local in house underwriting andclosing
• FHA/VA/Rural Development• First Time Home-Buyer ProgramAll products subject to borrower qualification
One UnionWharf, Portland, ME 04101207.523.8114
www.townandshore.com
Distinctive Real EstateExtensive experience
Comprehensive market knowledgeInternational listing exposureBob Knecht
Owner/Broker
It starts with a confidentialCONVERSATION
Roxane A. Cole, CCIMMANAGING MEMBER/COMMERCIAL BROKER
Roxane A. Cole, CCIM
WWW.ROXANECOLE.COM
OWNER/USERBuy, occupy and pay only
.50 per square foot(includes debt and CAM)
TENANTYear-one Rent Incentive
for minimum five-year leasefor 54,000± square feet
FOR SALE/FOR LEASE
Please come by and see our models available now!Prices range from $325,000 to $550,000
Open Thursday-Sunday 11-4
Exclusively Marketed By:David Banks207-553-7302
CONTRIBUTED
Fluid Farms previously operated in a small greenhouse in Portland’s Bayside area.
greens to area restaurants and markets on a shoestring budget, Gaudet said.
McLeod said he had initially seen the operation as strictly about growing food. “I really didn’t think it about as a business until like the second year,” he said. “As soon as we got some produce to some markets, and saw other people’s excitement, I think that’s when it clicked for me. I (thought), ‘we could go some-where with this.’”
Their success pushed them to ex-pand, and to buy a production-scale 2,600-square-foot greenhouse, which they will build and move into this spring on the North Yarmouth farmland prop-erty. They hope to be operating by mid- to late May.
Gaudet and McLeod have benefited from generous support along the way. They launched an online fundraising
campaign March 11 to raise $5,000; it will cover additional expenses neces-sary for completion and operation of the greenhouse. Their Kickstarter campaign
reached its goal in just six days.That campaign’s success prompted
the men to set a new goal of $15,000, which will allow them to buy a heat-
ing system so they can produce fish and vegetables throughout the winter. Kickstarter backers are offered awards like Community Supported Agriculture food baskets, which people can enjoy or donate to the Preble Street Resource Center in Portland.
The extended campaign had raised nearly $8,200 by Tuesday morning.
Gaudet, a fisheries biologist for a Portland environmental consultant, has conducted fish studies throughout the U.S. in recent years. McLeod, who has spent his life cultivating backyard and kitchen gardens, has pursued a career in industrial manufacturing automation. He experimented with hydroponic food production and grew a passion for sus-tainable food models in college.
Log onto fluidfarms.com for more information.
Alex Lear can be reached at 781-3661 ext. 113 or [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter: @
learics.
Aquaponicsfrom page 1
April 10, 201340 Portland www.theforecaster.net
Annette and Rob ElowitchArt Consultants and AuctioneersAddress for shipping and mailing:
50 Market StreetSouth Portland, Maine 04106-3647Tel: 207 772 5011 Fax: 207 772 5049E-mail: [email protected]
Maine License #AR795The office is located at
401 Cumberland Avenue, Apt. 909Portland, Maine 04101
High quality additions are welcome anytime. Also Akers, M. A. Bain, Baziotes, Beal, Bergeret, Bow-er, Bricher, Burrage, Chadbourn, Cloos, Coppedge,Cozzens, De Prades, Dunning, Farruggio, Fusco,Gall, Gerry, Grabach, Graves, J.Gray, Green, Gruppé,Hallem, C.Hayes, Heliker, Hoeber, Hopkins, E. Hud-son, J. B. Hudson, Hutchens, Ipcar, Kahn, Katz, Kien-busch, Krieghoff, Kahn, Ladbrooke, Lansil, Linehan,Lofquist, Matania, Maxwell,, M.Moore, Munakata,C. Nelson, Nicoletti, Nuhfer, Oberteuffer, Peirce, Pot-thast, Romano, Rouland, Grau Sala, Sample, Scarlett,Schnakenberg Schoener, A.Shahn, Slade, Sloan, So-bel, Solomon, Soulen, Sprinchorn, Swan, Tavernier,Thon, Triscott,Vennemann, Vibert, Vincent, M.Walter,
Woodbury, Woodward, and many others
Drawings by Cassatt, Elsheimer, and Grosz, and orig-inal etchings and lithographs by Bonnard, Feininger,
Morisot, Picasso, and Whistler
Photographs by Daniell, Meyerowitz, and T.Webb
Annette and Rob Elowitch
Fine AuctionAmerican and European Art
PreviewsTuesday, April 23, 6 PM – 8 PM andWednesday, April 24, 10 AM – 5 PM
Wednesday, April 24 6 PM
Catalogues $45.00$60.00 for timely delivery outside the
U.S. and Canada
To be held at theInstitute of Contemporary Art
atMaine College of ArtPorteous Building
522 Congress Street Portland, Maine
Online bidding powered byArtfact.com and Liveauctioneers.com
BERNARDLANGLAIS
Portland in 1855Bangor in 1854
by J. W. Hill
John Bisbee
barridoff.com